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  2. Dead hedge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_hedge

    A dead hedge used as a roadside boundary. A dead hedge is a barrier constructed from cut branches, saplings, and foliage. The material can be gathered from activities such as pruning or clearing, and in traditional forms of woodland management, [1] such as coppicing. Its ecological succession can be a beetle bank or hedge.

  3. Hesperocyparis lusitanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesperocyparis_lusitanica

    Hesperocyparis lusitanica is an evergreen conifer tree with a conic to ovoid-conic crown, growing to 40 m tall. The foliage grows in dense sprays, dark green to somewhat yellow-green in colour. The leaves are scale-like, 2–5 mm long, and produced on rounded (not flattened) shoots.

  4. Leyland cypress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leyland_cypress

    The Leyland cypress, Cupressus × leylandii, × Cuprocyparis leylandii or × Cupressocyparis leylandii, often referred to simply as leylandii, is a fast-growing coniferous evergreen tree much used in horticulture, primarily for hedges and screens.

  5. Torreya taxifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torreya_taxifolia

    It is considered "the rarest conifer in North America." [80] The Center for Plant Conservation describes Florida torreya as "one of the rarest conifers in the world," reporting that in the mid-twentieth century it suffered a catastrophic decline, as all reproductive age trees died. Approximately 0.3% of the original population remains, mostly ...

  6. Podocarpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podocarpus

    Podocarpus (/ ˌ p oʊ d ə ˈ k ɑːr p ə s / [2]) is a genus of conifers, the most numerous and widely distributed of the podocarp family, the Podocarpaceae. Podocarpus species are evergreen shrubs or trees, usually from 1 to 25 m (3 to 82 ft) tall, known to reach 40 m (130 ft) at times.

  7. Thuja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thuja

    The genus Thuja, like many other forms of conifers, is represented by ancestral forms in Cretaceous rocks of northern Europe, and with the advance of time is found to migrate from northerly to more southerly regions, until during the Pliocene period, when it disappeared from Europe. Thuja is also known in the Miocene beds of the Dakotas. [9]

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