“…The health value of urban and suburban forests (barrier against noise, shade, clean air, and water) and the safety value (reducing the risk of natural disasters) consist in regulating services (benefits obtained from the regulation of ecosystem processes [17,18]). In the first case (health value), urban forests create a specific microclimate; protect against air pollution and have a soothing and healing influence on organisms exposed to the everyday pressure of crowded conditions, noise, and haste ( [2,19,20,42], e.g., in the United Kingdom [21,43], Finland [9,22,23], the Czech Republic [38], Turkey [44], Switzerland [12], Poland (e.g., [3,7,26,27,45]), France [40], Austria [24], Sweden [6], the Netherlands [31], and Norway [31]). In the second case (safety value), urban forests stabilize the soil, preventing its erosion, but also reduce the effects of storm water runoff (through canopy retention and infiltration) or winter wind; sequester carbon; and moderate the urban microclimate [26,46,47].…”