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Studies of Trees by Jacob Joshua Levison
page 142 of 203 (69%)
Forest Service and in Japan Forestry is receiving considerable
attention.

In the United States, the forest areas are controlled by private
interests, by the Government and by the States. On privately owned
forests, Forestry is practiced only in isolated cases. The States
are taking hold of the problem very actively and in many of them we
now find special Forestry Commissions authorized to care for vast
areas of forest land reserved for State control. These Commissions
employ technically trained foresters who not only protect the State
forests, but also plant new areas, encourage forest planting on
private lands and disseminate forestry information among the
citizens. New York State has such a Commission that cares for more
than a million acres of forest land located in the northern part of
the State. Many other States are equally progressive.

The United States Government is the most active factor in the
preservation of our forests. The Government to-day owns over two
hundred million acres of forest land, set aside as National Forests.
There are one hundred and fifty individual reserves, distributed as
shown in Fig. 137 and cared for by the Forest Service, a bureau in
the Department of Agriculture. Each of the forests is in charge of a
supervisor. He has with him a professional forester and a body of
men who patrol the tract against fire and the illegal cutting of
timber. Some of the men are engaged in planting trees on the open
areas and others in studying the important forest problems of the
region. Fig. 138.

[Illustration: FIG. 137.--Map Showing Our National Forests.]

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