Implementing the recommendations of the Chicago Wilderness Alliance’s Oak Ecosystems Recovery Plan through regional collaboration is a key priority of The Morton Arboretum’s Chicago Region Trees Initiative.
Oak trees are a keystone species in the Chicago region, meaning that entire ecosystems depend on these trees for survival and habitat. Acorns provide food for wildlife, and the massive trunks and branches of oak trees provide shelter to countless species of birds and mammals.
Oak trees also help create healthier communities. They clean our air by removing air pollution, help purify drinking water, and keep us cooler in the summer. Oak trees can help reduce water pollution, reduce asthma rates, and improve the overall health of our communities.
Oaks Need Our Help
After nearly 200 years of land development in the Chicago region, only small patches of oak ecosystems remain. These isolated oak woodlands need extra protection from invasive plants and other threats.
Oak trees need space and lots of sunlight to grow and thrive. In today’s landscape, oak trees are being crowded out by competition from faster-growing trees and invasive species and are removed for urban development.
A number of diseases are spreading among oaks in the United States including oak wilt, sudden oak death, and bur oak blight. Most of the oaks in the Chicago region are old, making them especially vulnerable to disease and drought. There are few middle-aged oaks or oak seedlings, a problem known as oak regeneration failure.
Climate change disrupts weather patterns, including causing heavy spring storms and prolonged summer droughts. These conditions further weaken oaks and intensify other stresses and threats.
Oaks are struggling not only in Illinois but throughout the world. At least one-third of the world’s oak species are threatened with extinction. As oaks disappear, so do their ecosystems.
The Arboretum’s Chicago Region Trees Initiative works locally with partners across the region to protect oak ecosystems and preserve these important keystone species.
Explore the projects and resources that support this goal.