Treescapes provides Tree Asset & Ecosystem Services Reports to help organisations better understand the environmental value of their tree populations.
Combining arboricultural field data, GIS-based inventories, and ecosystem services modelling, reports can quantify benefits such as:
- Carbon storage and sequestration
- Stormwater interception
- Air pollution removal
- Urban cooling and shade
- Biodiversity contribution
- Canopy cover and landscape value

Reports may include tree inventories, GIS mapping, ecosystem services modelling, environmental metrics, and arboricultural management recommendations.
These reports can support ESG initiatives, biodiversity-related reporting, campus and estate management, urban forestry planning, climate resilience strategies, and environmental communication.
Levels of Service
Canopy & Ecosystem Services Assessment
Remote sensing and GIS-based canopy analysis providing broad-scale ecosystem services estimation and environmental metrics.
Suitable for preliminary studies, canopy understanding, and high-level environmental reporting.
Tree Inventory & Ecosystem Services Assessment
Field-based tree inventory including species identification and dimensional data collection combined with ecosystem services analysis.
Suitable for campuses, institutions, estates, and detailed environmental assessment.
Arboricultural Management & Ecosystem Services Reporting
Comprehensive arboricultural assessment integrating tree condition, risk observations, management recommendations, GIS inventory, and ecosystem services reporting.
Suitable for organisations seeking long-term tree management, canopy retention, environmental stewardship, and ESG-aligned reporting.
Our approach combines practical arboriculture with environmental analysis, helping ensure that ecosystem service metrics remain grounded in the actual condition and long-term management of tree populations.
Based in Auroville near Pondicherry, India, with projects undertaken nationwide.
For enquiries or project discussions, please get in touch.
