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Colorado’s forests provide homes for many wildlife species, improve water quality, filter pollutants from water and air, enhance outdoor experiences, provide wood products, and supply jobs in local economies.

 

About Colorado Forests

Colorado’s forests are expansive, diverse and beautiful. They provide vital shelter for both people and wildlife, improve the quality of our water, filter pollutants from the air, enrich our outdoor experiences, and furnish products and jobs that strengthen local economies.

Colorado’s nearly 24.5 million acres of forested landscape are perhaps the most complex of any in the Intermountain West, with a diverse mix of coniferous and deciduous species. The most extensive forest types in Colorado are spruce-fir, ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, aspen and piñon-juniper.

This vegetative mosaic is a physical landscape that ranges from flat plains and high plateaus to steep mountains, deep canyons and sloping foothills. A wide range of topographical, soil and growing conditions further influence this variety and contribute to the state’s multi-faceted forest resources.

Colorado Forest Types

Forest types in Colorado include:

  • Spruce-fir
  • Ponderosa pine
  • Lodgepole pine
  • Douglas-fir
  • Aspen
  • Piñon-juniper
  • Southwestern white pine
  • Bristlecone pine
  • Limber pine
  • Colorado blue spruce
  • and the cottonwood-willow combination found in many riparian areas

Type your address or the city or town where you live into the search field on this map.

Map powered by the Colorado Forest Atlas from the Colorado State Forest Service