When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: spacing for eastern red cedar bonsai

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Phomopsis blight of juniper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phomopsis_Blight_of_Juniper

    Phomopsis juniperovora. G.G.Hahn. 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. Infection begins with the germination of asexual conidia, borne from pycnidia ...

  3. Juniperus virginiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juniperus_virginiana

    Juniperus virginiana foliage and mature cones. Juniperus virginiana is a dense slow-growing coniferous evergreen tree with a conical or subcylindrical shaped crown [8] that may never become more than a bush on poor soil, but is ordinarily from 5–20 metres (16–66 feet) tall, with a short trunk 30–100 centimetres (12–39 inches) in diameter, rarely to 27 m (89 ft) in height and 170 cm (67 ...

  4. Juniperus scopulorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juniperus_scopulorum

    Juniperus scopulorum is a small evergreen tree that in favorable conditions may reach as much as 20 metres (66 feet) in height. [4] However, on sites with little water or intense sun it will only attain shrub height, and even those that reach tree size will more typically be 4.6–6.1 metres (15–20 feet) tall in open juniper woodlands. [5]

  5. Thuja plicata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thuja_plicata

    Thuja plicata is a large evergreen coniferous tree in the family Cupressaceae, native to the Pacific Northwest of North America. Its common name is western redcedar in the U.S. [2] or western red cedar in the UK, [3] and it is also called pacific red cedar, giant arborvitae, western arborvitae, just cedar, giant cedar, or shinglewood. [4]

  6. A Hiker's Path: Solitude among the cedar trees worth trek to ...

    www.aol.com/hikers-path-solitude-among-cedar...

    The preserve is known for the 75-foot-high bluff that is covered in eastern red cedar trees that overlooks beautiful Clear Creek below. Cedar Bluffs Nature Preserve opened in 1976 and is owned by ...

  7. Ulmus crassifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_crassifolia

    Ulmus crassifolia Nutt., the Texas cedar elm or simply cedar elm, is a deciduous tree native to south-central North America, mainly in southern and eastern Texas, southern Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Louisiana, with small populations in western Mississippi, southwest Tennessee, and north-central Florida; [2] it also occurs in northeastern Mexico.

  8. Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnosporangium_juniperi...

    Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae is a plant pathogen that causes cedar-apple rust. [1] In virtually any location where apples or crabapples (Malus) and eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana) coexist, cedar apple rust can be a destructive or disfiguring disease on both the apples and cedars. Apples, crabapples, and eastern red cedar are ...

  9. Cedrus deodara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedrus_deodara

    The leaves are needle-like, mostly 2.5–5 centimetres (1–2 inches) long, occasionally up to 7 cm (3 in) long, slender (1 millimetre or in thick), borne singly on long shoots, and in dense clusters of 20–30 on short shoots; they vary from bright green to glaucous blue-green in colour. The female cones are barrel-shaped, 7–13 cm (–5 in ...