When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fire adaptations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_adaptations

    The pictures were taken one and two years after the fire. Fire adaptations are traits of plants and animals that help them survive wildfire or to use resources created by wildfire. These traits can help plants and animals increase their survival rates during a fire and/or reproduce offspring after a fire. Both plants and animals have multiple ...

  3. Fire ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_ecology

    Fire adaptations are traits of plants and animals that help them survive wildfire or to use resources created by wildfire. These traits can help plants and animals increase their survival rates during a fire and/or reproduce offspring after a fire. Both plants and animals have multiple strategies for surviving and reproducing after fire.

  4. Pyrophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrophyte

    Pyrophyte. Pyrophytes are plants which have adapted to tolerate fire. Fire acts favourably for some species. "Passive pyrophytes" resist the effects of fire, particularly when it passes over quickly, and hence can out-compete less resistant plants, which are damaged. "Active pyrophytes" have a similar competing advantage to passive pyrophytes ...

  5. Taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiga

    The prevalence of fire-adaptive morphologic and reproductive characteristics of many boreal plant species is further evidence pointing to a long and intimate association with fire. Seven of the ten most common trees in the boreal forest—jack pine, lodgepole pine, aspen, balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera), paper birch, tamarack, black spruce ...

  6. Pinus contorta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinus_contorta

    Depending on subspecies, Pinus contorta grows as an evergreen shrub or tree. The shrub form is krummholz and is approximately 1 to 3 meters (3 to 10 ft) high. The thin and narrow-crowned tree can grow 40 to 50 m (130 to 160 ft) high and achieve up to 2 m (7 ft) in diameter at chest height. [4] The murrayana subspecies is the tallest.

  7. Aspen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspen

    Some aspen colonies become very large with time, spreading about 1 m (3 ft) per year, eventually covering many hectares. They are able to survive forest fires, because the roots are below the heat of the fire, and new sprouts appear after the fire burns out. The high stem turnover rate combined with the clonal growth leads to proliferation in ...

  8. Sequoia sempervirens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequoia_sempervirens

    In response to forest fires, the trees have developed various adaptations. The thick, fibrous bark of coast redwoods is extremely fire-resistant; it grows to at least a foot thick and protects mature trees from fire damage. [55] [56] In addition, the redwoods contain little flammable pitch or resin. [56]

  9. Jack pine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_pine

    This pine often forms pure stands on sandy or rocky soil. Many populations are adapted to stand-replacing fires, with the cones remaining closed for many years, until a forest fire kills the mature trees and opens the cones, reseeding the burnt ground. Other populations have not been shaped by regular stand-replacing fires and have reduced ...