Community greenspaces that provide recreational opportunities and also offer and enhance wildlife habitats.
"Air conditioners" that produce vast amounts of oxygen while cleansing the air of pollution and cooling the atmosphere.
Water treatment systems: Healthy turfgrass is an excellent filter that traps and holds pollutants in place; courses actually serve as catch basins for residential and industrial runoff; many courses are effective disposal sites for effluent wastewater.
Among the best ways to reclaim and restore environmentally damaged sites, such as landfills.
Businesses that contribute substantially to communities through employment, taxes, property value improvement and enormous charitable support.
Independent university research supports the fact that well-managed golf courses do not pose significant risks to environmental quality, wildlife or human health.
The modern pesticides and fertilizers used to maintain healthy golf course turf have been thoroughly tested and are considered safe when used according to label directions.
A pesticide product today has typically undergone more than 120 studies at a cost of $50 million before it is registered by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Most of today's superintendents have college degrees and substantial continuing education.
Superintendents are the nation's leading practitioners of integrated pest management, a philosophy that reduces the potential environmental risks of pesticide usage.
Virtually all golf courses employ at least one state licensed pesticide applicator who is trained in environmentally sound pesticide use.