0 past simple and past participle of reforest
1 to plant trees on an area of land that has become empty or spoiled
A wood cleared for a field or reforested, or a water meadow drained, will be much more valuable even if the farmer forgoes the grant.
Reforestation, the planting of tree seedlings on logged areas, has also been criticized for decreasing biodiversity because reforested areas are monocultures.
He consolidated the walls, reforested the spaces, created nooks and manicured spaces and conserved the chapel.
Croplands, reforested uplands, bottomland hardwoods, cypress swamps and permanent waters are molded to benefit wildlife.
This is being countered with reforestation efforts over as much as 743,224 hectares, with about 2,500 hectares fully reforested every year.
The former camp, forgotten or repressed, was blown up and the area reforested again.
The land was never reforested correctly, due to ownership disputes; and the tree is very slow to reforest itself.
Because it was abandoned so early, the area has been reforested for most of the historic period.