Uh, what do you mean? Like, wood that isn't endangered? I guess you could check environmental sites, or building supply sites. Sometimes, endangered wood is allowed to be sold if it's recycled from old buildings or dredged up from a river bed. I saw a thing where some guy was pulling these logs out of a river that had been submerged for like a hundred years and they were wood that can't be harvested anymore and the quality was fantastic even though it had been underwater for ages.
So, yeah, look at a site that sells hardwood flooring or something like that--I mean, a reputable site, not some bootleg endangered tree selling website. Or check a tree site, maybe the Nature Conservancy or someplace like that.
2006-09-17 09:41:41
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answer #1
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answered by SlowClap 6
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u mean "endangered plants"...
u can check Dept. of forestry/ Environment site. They shud have it like i got for my country on our govt site
or some enviro. institute/ agency site
e.g.
http://www.centerforplantconservation.org/NC_Choice.html
2006-09-17 23:42:13
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answer #2
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answered by SMITA 2
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