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  2. Hesperocyparis arizonica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesperocyparis_arizonica

    Hesperocyparis arizonica was given its first scientific name and described by Edward Lee Greene in 1882 as Cupressus arizonica, placing it in genus Cupressus. [3] [5] This description was soon after disputed by Maxwell T. Masters who, in 1896, published a journal article where he said it should be considered a subspecies of Cupressus benthamii with the variety name of arizonica. [3]

  3. Cypress canker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypress_canker

    The first epidemic of cypress canker was recorded in California in 1928, with Monterey cypress (Cupressus macrocarpa) being affected. Within a few years the local populations of this tree had been killed. The species is widely traded as an ornamental tree and the disease had soon spread worldwide, probably with nursery stock.

  4. Hesperocyparis glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesperocyparis_glabra

    Hesperocyparis glabra, known as the Arizona smooth bark cypress or smooth Arizona cypress, is a conifer native to the American Southwest, with a range stretching over the canyons and slopes in a somewhat wide vicinity around Sedona, Arizona.

  5. Bruce Kreitler: Arizona cypress a great tree, if you ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/bruce-kreitler-arizona-cypress...

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  6. Hesperocyparis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesperocyparis

    Members of Hesperocyparis were and still are placed in Cupressus by many authorities, but phylogenetic evidence supports a different affinity. A 2021 molecular study found Hesperocyparis to be the sister group to the genus Callitropsis (containing only the Nootka cypress), with this clade being sister to the Asian genus Xanthocyparis, containing only the Vietnamese golden cypress.

  7. Cupressaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupressaceae

    Dawn redwood is widely planted as an ornamental tree because of its excellent horticultural qualities, rapid growth and status as a living fossil. [26] Giant sequoia is a popular ornamental tree [27] and is occasionally grown for timber. [28] Giant sequoia, [29] Leyland cypress, and Arizona cypress are grown to a small extent as Christmas trees ...

  8. Cupressus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupressus

    Cypress are evergreen trees or large shrubs, growing to 5–40 m (16–131 ft) tall, exceptionally up to 102 m tall (the second-tallest tree species on earth, after Sequoia sempervirens) in Cupressus austrotibetica. [5]

  9. Phomopsis blight of juniper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis_Blight_of_Juniper

    Phomopsis blight of juniper is a foliar disease discovered in 1917 [1] caused by the fungal pathogen Phomopsis juniperovora.The fungus infects new growth of juniper trees or shrubs, i.e. the seedlings or young shoots of mature trees.