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Topic: Douglasfir


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In the News (Fri 13 Nov 09)

  
  DOUGLASFIR - Pseudotsuga menziesii
Douglasfir is a large conifer that makes an excellent landscape plant for accent and grouping.
Douglasfir is an important timber tree and is also grown for Christmas trees.
There are two major varieties of Douglasfir and it's important to use the most appropriate one.
www.mnpower.com /treebook/fact87.html   (140 words)

  
 The Tree Guide at Arborday.org
The Douglasfir can be expected to grow in the zones shown in color in the arborday.org zone map.
While the Douglasfir may have first been introduced to cultivation by botanist-explorer David Douglas in 1826, its importance to American history continues unabated.
The Douglasfir was crucial to American soldiers in World War II as well, being used for everything from GIs' foot lockers to portable huts and even the rails of stretchers that carried many a soldier from battle.
www.arborday.org /Trees/TreeGuide/TreeDetail.cfm?id=44   (371 words)

  
 Szaro: Biodiversity of Forest Ecosystems of Western North America
Douglasfir, hemlock, and white fir can disperse their seed via wind over considerable distances to burnedover areas.
Douglasfir is a particularly unique species because of its broad ecological amplitude-it can be found at low, mid, and high elevations from the southern to northern borders of the United States.
Interior Douglasfir is the most commonly found species throughout much of this zone, both geographically and elevationally, but it nearly always grows in association with other conifers.
www.metla.fi /iufro/iufro95abs/rsp7.htm   (7584 words)

  
 Douglas fir chalet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Douglasfir can grow with western lumber grading service mills and to douglas fir and western woods region.
Douglasfir is one of the winter, with forked, snaketonguelike bracts extending from each.
Douglasfir is one of the american christmas tree plantations.
douglas-fir.hurricanemichael.info /douglas-fir-chalet.html   (590 words)

  
 LewHisLumBm   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Today, one fourth of all the standing saw timber in the United States is Douglasfir, but in the early 1800s it was not even known outside the largely uninhabited West.
The canyons of Cache Valley had plenty of Douglasfir in the 1860s and 1870s, and inside of a decade, dozens of canyon sawmills would be supplying ties for the railroad.
In addition, there were at least two tanning operations in the canyons, using ground Douglasfir bark as a tanning agent; there were grist mills throughout the valley, too, a couple of woolen mills, and many smaller furniture and cabinet shops.
www.dragongoose.com /LewHisLumBm.html   (2008 words)

  
 Compare Picea, Pseudotsuga and Abies
The genus Pseudotsuga is a species commonly known as Douglasfir.
The genus Abies is a group of trees and shrubs commonly referred to as Fir.
Unlike, the Spruce and Douglasfir, Fir trees' cones stand upright on the stem and the needles are flat with a relatively dull point.
utgardens.tennessee.edu /ohld220/trees/compare/spruce-fir   (181 words)

  
 Flora Of Durango, Colorado   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Another common groundcover,usually found in the shade of douglasfir.
Don't mistake this tree as a Fir, because it is certainly not..
(Note Douglasfir is all one word) Very common throughout lower areas, moist and often shady.
www.frontier.net /~milo/Flora.html   (1105 words)

  
 Dr. Patrick von Aderkas   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Current interest centes on experimental reproductive biology of Douglasfir (Pseudotsuga) and larches (Larix spp.).
Both of these genera have pollenwhich take many weeks to elongate in situ and then suddenly produce a pollinationtube in response to a post-pollination drop.
With the recentachievement of in vitro fertilization of conifers, we intend to continuestudying various mechanisms involved in pollen attraction, events at andduring fertilization, and embryo rescue.
web.uvic.ca /~bioweb/People/vonaderkas/vonaderkas.htm   (166 words)

  
 CACTOS Compare Yield Averager
An example of an initialization file is as follows: Pond.
Pine* Sugar Pine* Cedar misc* DouglasFir* White Fir where only the first 4 species names are used since the last name doesnÕt have an asterisk in column 11.
Pine 29.52 5.00 5.33.00.00.00 5.99.61 s.e.:.00 (1).00.00.00.00.00.00 Sugar Pine 40.52 5.00 5.76.63 3.67 16.62 3.86.53 s.e.:.00 (1).00.00.00.00.00.00 Cedar misc 32.65 5.00 2.46.51.00.00 2.48.35 s.e.: 22.43 (3) 1.23.26.00.00.25.18 DouglasFir 24.30 5.00 7.34.00.00.00 4.77.27 s.e.: 3.11 (2) 2.59.00.00.00 1.87.02 White Fir 67.29 5.00 3.81.00 8.87 26.73 3.64.77 s.e.: 45.49 (3) 1.44.00 8.87 26.73.71 8.46 Con.
www.cnr.berkeley.edu /~wensel/cactos/cpavg/cpav.htm   (1505 words)

  
 Yield Summary
Pine 5.00 25.15 29.7 102.4 3.85 23.08 10.2.60 4.22 Cedar misc 5.00 21.63 4.9 12.6.27 1.31 1.0.03.19 DouglasFir 5.00 23.62 19.8 60.2 2.05 11.78 7.8.41 2.64 Totals 5.00 24.30 54.4 175.2 6.17 36.17 19.0 1.04 7.05 M -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pond.
Pine 10.00 26.58 29.4 113.3 4.53 27.96 11.0.68 4.88 Cedar misc 10.00 22.68 4.9 13.7.31 1.52 1.1.04.21 DouglasFir 10.00 25.35 19.6 68.7 2.52 14.95 8.5.47 3.17 Totals 10.00 25.81 53.9 195.7 7.35 44.42 20.5 1.19 8.26 M -------------------------------------------------------------------------- HARVESTS: R3 with 60% cut growth harvested -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pond.
Pine 5.00 16.22 4.9 7.0.21 1.11 1.0.05.28 Sugar Pine 5.00 37.57 10.0 76.6 3.39 23.91 8.5.52 4.21 Cedar misc 5.00 25.74 24.7 89.3 2.32 12.79 5.1.19 1.24 DouglasFir 5.00 26.51 39.3 150.6 6.07 38.34 14.2.86 6.12 Totals 5.00 27.43 78.9 323.6 12.00 76.14 28.8 1.61 11.85 M -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pond.
www.cnr.berkeley.edu /~wensel/both/ydavg/ydemo.htm   (1098 words)

  
 curve * Estimates of site index and height growth for Douglasfir in highelevation forests of the OregonWashington ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
curve * Estimates of site index and height growth for Douglasfir in highelevation forests of the OregonWashington Cascade Range curves * Donald J. DeMars
Estimates of site index and height growth for Douglasfir in highelevation forests of the OregonWashington Cascade Range curves
The wish giver three tales coven tree questions and units.
www.bookauthors.de /book_feddde.html   (108 words)

  
 Recent Posts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Started by BackInTheSaddle - Last post by DouglasFir
I can't pick one genre of movie - that way lies madness!
Your choice should appear in bold while the others are not.
aerosmithforever.com /index.php?action=recent   (485 words)

  
 Oregon word search puzzle - Find these words in this Geography wordsearch - ASHLAND, ASTORIA, BEAVER, BEAVERSTATE, ...
Oregon word search puzzle - Find these words in this Geography wordsearch - ASHLAND, ASTORIA, BEAVER, BEAVERSTATE, BLUEMOUNTAINS, CHINOOKSALMON, COLUMBIARIVER, COOSBAY, CRATERLAKE, DOUGLASFIR, EUGENE, FOLKDANCE, FRENCHGLEN, GRANTSPASS, HARNEYBASIN, HAZELNUT, KLAMATHFALLS, MALHUERLAKE, MEADOWLARK, MILK, MOUNTHOOD, NINTHBIGGEST, OREGONGRAPE, PORTLAND, SALEM, SNAKERIVER, THEDALLES, THIRTYTHIRDSTATE, TILLAMOOK, TIMBER
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Try to find all 30 words on this board.
www.wordsearchfun.com /33374_Oregon_wordsearch.html   (61 words)

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