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Larix laricina, commonly known as the tamarack, [3] hackmatack, [3] eastern larch, [3] black larch, [3] red larch, [3] or American larch, [3] is a species of larch native to Canada, from eastern Yukon and Inuvik, Northwest Territories east to Newfoundland, and also south into the upper northeastern United States from Minnesota to Cranesville Swamp, West Virginia; there is also an isolated ...
The bog contains a large variety of plants, including insect eating plants, tamarack trees, stands of blueberry bushes, and floating mats of sphagnum moss. Pinhook Bog is about 580 acres (2.3 km 2), a quarter of which is a floating mat of sphagnum peat moss. A "moat" separates the bog from the uplands.
On breaking up the category indexing, I believe that if the code [[Category:Pinaceae|Larch, Tamarack]] is used, "Tamarack" would appear with the other larches under the letter "L". On the two sources, the first is a tourism site for British Columbia where the tree is not all that common except in the northeastern corner, so hardly authoritative.
The Tannersville Cranberry Bog or Cranberry Swamp is a sphagnum bog on the Cranberry Creek in Tannersville, Pennsylvania.It is the southernmost boreal bog east of the Mississippi River, containing many black spruce and tamarack trees at the southern limit of their ranges.
Tamarack Flat Campground, campground in Yosemite National Park, California Tamarack Golf Club , Labrador City, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada Tamarack Resort , all-season resort southwest of Donnelly in Valley County, Idaho
Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.
Small larch poles are widely used for rustic fencing. [17] The wood is highly prized as firewood in the Pacific Northwest where it is often called "tamarack," although it is a different species than the tamarack larch. The wood burns with a sweet fragrance and a distinctive popping noise. [18] Western larch is used for the production of Venice ...
Melampsora medusae is a fungal pathogen, causing a disease of woody plants.The infected trees' leaves turn yellowish-orange. The disease affects mostly conifers, e.g. the Douglas-fir, western larch, tamarack, ponderosa, and lodgepole pine trees, but also some broadleaves, e.g. trembling aspen and poplars.