urban pressure is negligible on a global scale--this is actually freeing up vast areas of land for use as people migrate to denser living.
Agriculture is a harder angle to attack; however, trees are excellent use of space: they store carbon for a period of time, they require low maintenance, they oxygenate the atmosphere, they can be planted cheaply and densely; harvesting them allows use of stored carbon (build with wood! Paper. Etc); they can be planted in areas that are typically not friendly to agriculture (eg mountains, places with extreme cold, etc). For the space we do have, there isn't much reason NOT to plant trees.
I would be interested in a comparison between different types of dense vegetation; eg trees vs grass vs moss vs algae, etc etc.
Agriculture is a harder angle to attack; however, trees are excellent use of space: they store carbon for a period of time, they require low maintenance, they oxygenate the atmosphere, they can be planted cheaply and densely; harvesting them allows use of stored carbon (build with wood! Paper. Etc); they can be planted in areas that are typically not friendly to agriculture (eg mountains, places with extreme cold, etc). For the space we do have, there isn't much reason NOT to plant trees.
I would be interested in a comparison between different types of dense vegetation; eg trees vs grass vs moss vs algae, etc etc.