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Ļć½¶Ö±²„celebrates Arbor Day with annual campus tree planting

Ļć½¶Ö±²„celebrates Arbor Day with annual campus tree planting

Contact: Reagan Poston

A large group is gathered on a grassy bank along Hail State Boulevard around a Tree Campus USA banner.
Ļć½¶Ö±²„faculty, staff and students planted trees along Hail State Boulevard Feb. 7 in celebration of Arbor Day and the universityā€™s designation as a Tree Campus USA, an honor awarded by the Arbor Day Foundation. (Photo by Megan Bean)

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Mississippi State faculty, staff and students commemorated Arbor Day on Friday [Feb. 7] by planting trees along Hail State Boulevard.

The eighth annual event took place a week prior to Mississippiā€™s Arbor Day observance, which occurs the second Friday in February. Nationally, Arbor Day is in April, but southern states celebrate earlier to ensure a better survival rate for newly planted trees.

Seedlings planted include loblolly pine, burr oak and bald cypress.

Two women plant pine seedlings in a grassy area with a roadway in the background.
Ļć½¶Ö±²„forestry graduate students Sabhyata Lamichhane of Nepal and Mahesha Kuluppuarachchi of Sri Lanka plant seedlings as part of MSUā€™s eighth annual Arbor Day celebration. (Photo by Megan Bean)

Paul Jeffreys, an Ļć½¶Ö±²„College of Forest Resources alumnus and reforestation advisor at ArborGen, Inc., was eager to supply the university with seedlings for this yearā€™s event.

ā€œIt gives me a sense of pride knowing that ArborGen, Inc. is growing the seedlings that Mississippi State is using to beautify campus,ā€ Jeffreys said. ā€œItā€™s like my home. Itā€™s the place that helped me meet my goals and reach my career, and Iā€”like many other alumniā€”want to do everything I can to contribute back to it. For me, that means planting trees.ā€Ā 

For the last several years, the Arbor Day observance also has been an opportunity to celebrate MSUā€™s designation as a Tree Campus USA. The event is organized by the universityā€™s Campus Tree Advisory Committee, helmed by Joshua Granger, assistant professor in the College of Forest Resources.

Ā ā€œI think people genuinely appreciate the services trees provide to our communities. Theyā€™re valued for aesthetics, wildlife habitat, watershed protection and more. Offering people the opportunity to plant a tree themselves and to have a personal stake in that tree creates a living legacy at MSU,ā€ Granger said.

Ā ā€œTwenty years from now, a former student may drive past the pine tree they planted and see it 40 feet high and recognize that they left a permanent and positive mark on campus,ā€ Granger said.

For more information on MSUā€™s College of Forest Resources, visitĀ .

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at www.msstate.edu.