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  2. Elaeagnus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elaeagnus

    Elaeagnus plants are deciduous or evergreen shrubs or small trees. [3] The alternate leaves and the shoots are usually covered with tiny silvery to brownish scales, giving the plants a whitish to grey-brown colour from a distance.

  3. List of trees and shrubs by taxonomic family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trees_and_shrubs...

    Cecropia: cecropia trees; Cecropia peltata: trumpet tree; yagrumo hembra Moraceae (mulberry family) Ficus: fig trees; Ficus altissima: council tree Moraceae (mulberry family) Ficus aspera: lofty fig; clown fig Moraceae (mulberry family) Ficus aurea: Florida strangler fig Moraceae (mulberry family) 876 Ficus auriculata: Roxburgh fig Moraceae ...

  4. Evergreen forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen_forest

    An evergreen forest is a forest made up of evergreen trees. They occur across a wide range of climatic zones, and include trees such as conifers and holly in cold climates, eucalyptus , live oak , acacias , magnolia , and banksia in more temperate zones, and rainforest trees in tropical zones.

  5. Evergreen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen

    Evergreen trees also lose leaves, but each tree loses its leaves gradually and not all at once. Most tropical rainforest plants are considered to be evergreens, replacing their leaves gradually throughout the year as the leaves age and fall, whereas species growing in seasonally arid climates may be either evergreen or deciduous.

  6. Thuja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thuja

    The five species in the genus Thuja are small to large evergreen trees with flattened branchlets. The leaves are arranged in flattened fan shaped groupings with resin-glands, and oppositely grouped in 4 ranks. The mature leaves are different from younger leaves, with those on larger branchlets having sharp, erect, free apices.

  7. Pinus sylvestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinus_sylvestris

    Young female cone Pinus sylvestris forest in Sierra de Guadarrama, central Spain. Pinus sylvestris is an evergreen coniferous tree growing up to 35 metres (115 feet) in height [4] and 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in trunk diameter when mature, [5] exceptionally over 45 m (148 ft) tall and 1.7 m (5 + 1 ⁄ 2 ft) in trunk diameter on very productive sites.

  8. Sequoia sempervirens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequoia_sempervirens

    It is an evergreen, long-lived, monoecious tree living 1,200–2,200 years or more. [4] This species includes the tallest living trees on Earth, reaching up to 115.9 m (380.1 ft) in height (without the roots) and up to 8.9 m (29 ft) in diameter at breast height. These trees are also among the longest-living trees on Earth.

  9. Quercus ilex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercus_ilex

    It is a large evergreen tree, attaining in favourable places a height of 21–28 metres (69–92 feet), and developing in open situations a huge head of densely leafy branches as much across, the terminal portions of the branches often pendulous in old trees. The tallest recorded, a tree planted at Windsor Great Park, is 30.4 m tall. [7]