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Wind and Trees: A Survey of Homeowners after Hurrican Andrew

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"The destructive winds of Hurricane Andrew dramatically changed the urban forest in Dade County, Florida, on August 24, 1992. Overnight, the tree canopy was replaced by a landscape of unbroken, uprooted, defoliated, and severely damaged trees. To assist communities in reforestation efforts, scientists at the University of Florida conducted a homeowner survey to determine how different tree species responded to strong winds. Native tree species, such as box leaf stopper, sabal palm gumbo limbo, and live oak were the best survivors of the winds. Other palms such as areca, cabada, and Alexander were also highly wind resistant. In general, fruit trees such as navel orange, mango, avocado, and grapefruit were severely damaged. Black olive, live oak, and gumbo limbo trees that were pruned survived the hurricane better than the unpruned trees did. Only 18% of all the trees that fell caused property damage. Hurricane-susceptible communities should consider wind resistance as one of their criteria in tree species selection."

Authors
M.L. Duryea, G.M. Blakeslee, W.G. Hubbard, R.A. Vasquez
Date Published
2004
Journal/Conference
Journal of Arboriculture
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
ISBN/ISSN
0278-5226
Volume/Issue/Number
22//1
Start Page
44
End Page
50
Pages
7
Sub-Topics
Mechanics (tree), Risk Assessment and Hazard, Inventory (tree)
Keywords
Homeowner survey, Hurricane, Storm, Storm damage, Survey, Wind
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