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  2. Douglas fir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_fir

    Douglas-fir seeds are an extremely important food source for small mammals such as moles, shrews, and chipmunks, which consume an estimated 65% of each annual seed crop. The Douglas squirrel harvests and hoards great quantities of Douglas-fir cones, and also consumes mature pollen cones, the inner bark, terminal shoots, and developing young ...

  3. Cedar hemlock douglas-fir forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedar_hemlock_douglas-fir...

    Cedar hemlock douglas-fir forest is a vegetation association in California, United States. This is one of the Kuchler system forest types used to classify California plant communities. [1] As the name implies, dominant tree types are Incense cedar, Western Hemlock and Douglas fir. The forest type is classified FRES20 in the Kuchler system. [2]

  4. Pseudotsuga macrocarpa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudotsuga_macrocarpa

    Pseudotsuga macrocarpa, commonly called the bigcone spruce or bigcone Douglas-fir, is an evergreen conifer native to the mountains of southern California. It is notable for having the largest (by far) cones in the genus Pseudotsuga , hence the name.

  5. California mixed evergreen forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_mixed_evergreen...

    Douglas-fir forests are found on gentle slopes, north-facing slopes, ridges with deep soil, and river terraces with deep sediments, usually underlain with sedimentary rocks. Coast Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii ssp. menziesii) is the predominant tree, occupying up to 70% of the forest cover. Broadleaf evergreen trees are relatively few.

  6. Pseudotsuga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudotsuga

    Coast Douglas-fir seed cone, from a tree grown from seed collected by David Douglas Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii has attained heights of 393 feet (120* m). That was the estimated height of the tallest conifer ever well-documented, the Mineral Tree ( Mineral, Washington ), measured in 1924 by Dr. Richard E. McArdle, [ 7 ] former chief of ...

  7. Is my tree at risk of falling? As wind sweeps Northern ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/tree-risk-falling-wind-sweeps...

    The following information was originally published in January 2023 and has been updated. What does a tree at risk of falling look like? The tricky part is fallen trees are typically unexpected and ...

  8. Is my tree at risk of falling? Use these tips as Northern ...

    www.aol.com/news/tree-risk-falling-tips-northern...

    There are two key signs your tree might topple over, an arborist told us.

  9. A sacred 13,000-year-old tree faces off with a California ...

    www.aol.com/finance/sacred-13-000-old-tree...

    The tree has since gone on to become one of the oldest organisms in the world at what National Geographic projected to be 13,000 years old. Other estimates clock the self-cloning tree as up to ...