English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am doing a science project and alot of people in my neighborhood don't know their tree. If you can help in any way I'd be very happy!

2006-12-30 08:15:48 · 10 answers · asked by ღGirly Gurlღ 3 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

10 answers

First, narrow it down by determining if it is deciduous (loses leaves in the Fall) or evergreen. Observe the growth habits such as height and get other details from the owners. Find out if the tree flowers, collect specimens of the leaves and pinecones if it is a pine tree species and, photos would be helpful. Find a horticulturalist in your area. A good place to look is a nearby college that has a horticultural or botany department, someone who knows their stuff at a local plant nursery (one independently owned because someone there will most likely be trained) or a county extension service office that has horticulture-educated staff. Take your specimens and photos to that person to help you.

If one does not know at all what kind of tree you do what is called "key it out" which I did in school using the Jepson Manual.

2006-12-30 09:34:55 · answer #1 · answered by Goldenrain 6 · 0 0

Thats a VERY broad question. You would need to know what kind of tree's grow in your area and find a book about differant tree species. Then just try to identify the ones around you using the book.

2006-12-30 08:19:39 · answer #2 · answered by keegansdad05 1 · 1 0

You can tell by the color of the bark of the tree, its leaf shapes and the flowers. But if you want to identify a certain tree you should look in wikipedia. or go to the www.arborday.org that is a cool site all about trees.

2006-12-30 08:20:07 · answer #3 · answered by Tapestry6 7 · 0 0

the proper method is via the flower by using a floral formula.

Other wise put some photos of the trees, flowers, leaves etc and people will solve them.

Ca = calyx (sepal whorl; e.g. Ca5 = 5 sepals)
Co = corolla (petal whorl; e.g., Co3(x) = petals some multiple of three )
Z = add if zygomorphic (e.g., CoZ6 = zygomorphic with 6 petals)
A = androecium (whorl of stamens; e.g., A∞ = many stamens)
G = gynoecium (carpel or carpels; e.g., G1 = monocarpous)
x - to represent a "variable number"
∞ - to represent "many"

A floral formula would appear something like this:

Ca5Co5A10 - ∞G1

2006-12-30 08:20:22 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You would need to take a few leaves on the tree to your local gardening center or green house and they would be able to identify it.

2006-12-30 08:31:52 · answer #5 · answered by couchP56 6 · 0 0

as quickly as I plant a tree i decide directly to appreciate that it will strengthen in that spot for the remainder of its very long existence, so I do diverse prep paintings and study. i decide directly to appreciate if i'm going to work out it from interior, and which homestead windows Will or no longer it truly is evergreen or deciduous- eg do i decide on coloration, wind secure practices and privateness all twelve months or portion of the twelve months? Do I innovations the leaves it may desire to drop? What variety of soil do I truly have: clay, sand, loam or blend? How tall can the tree get? think of appropriate to the certainty that one and all timber die finally and plan the area to guard homes- yours and your acquaintances. the place interior the country do you reside? for sure someplace interior the north, yet are you interior the mountains? close to the shore, close to water? I stay in zone 6 interior the NE, with ordinarily clay soil jap Maples are small, can strengthen close to residences, have superb hues and charm and could face up to the chilly and storms here. We even have superb Magnolias- the type that have dinner plate length white plant existence Spruces are regal and black pine has a astounding sculptural variety and could do very properly even close to to the sea. Willows are gorgeous- they are in bloom this week!! in addition they have roots which will truly invade foundations and water lines, so i might in simple terms plant one next to a physique of water that grow to be faraway from any construction or utility lines.(even sewer lines). Many uncomplicated maples have invasive roots besides. Sycamore is sweet-looking and solid. regardless of you do, PLEASE do no longer plant any of those "absolute to strengthen 5' in a twelve months" monsters. They do strengthen and strengthen and strengthen and so do their roots which invade each little bit of soil they are able to realize, reason concrete and asphalt to buckle and bulge and reproduce for ever and ever from the roots platforms. maximum of those are poplars

2016-10-28 18:14:32 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Use a field guide.I.E. Petersons Contact your local tree warden,or a cooperative extension office.

2006-12-30 09:58:22 · answer #7 · answered by Edmund C 1 · 0 0

The leaf is the easiest way to tell. Each tree species has their own distinct leaf pattern.

2006-12-30 08:17:50 · answer #8 · answered by jasemay71 5 · 1 0

Take a clipping of some leaves to a gardening center, they should have someone there that should be able to help you identify them.

2006-12-30 08:18:05 · answer #9 · answered by Tigerlillie 3 · 0 0

The national arbor day foundation has some great guides.

2006-12-30 08:18:42 · answer #10 · answered by VirtualElvis 4 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers