Shrubby two-needled pine of coastal northwestern United States; red to yellow-brown bark fissured into small squares.
Sinónimos
Examples for "lodgepole"
Examples for "lodgepole"
1Soon the lodgepole pines were throwing long shadows across the campground.
2In a worrying trend, it also has spread from lodgepole pine to ponderosa pine.
3Behind him and across from him, ponderosa and lodgepole pines blanketed the steep mountainsides.
4In strictly lodgepole territory, however, it may be the only promise of a new forest.
5Where yellow pine will grow, the problem is most likely to be to discourage lodgepole competition.
1In a worrying trend, it also has spread from lodgepole pine to ponderosa pine.
2Scattering lodgepole pine began in the hills, and thickened into dense yellow-green thickets on the upper mountain slopes.
3This wound at sharp and ever-changing angles into the hills, and presently they were pressing through a dense growth of lodgepole pine.
4Even lodgepole pine, that sinewy golliwog of a pulpwood conifer, finds it hard to keep its footing at 300 metres above the ocean.
5Population subdivision was weak within and among lodgepole pine subspecies and in jack pine (i.e., theta values were less than 0.05).
1They proved to be a species of spruce pine, very proper for spars, which were then wanted.
2The objects observed were found to be a species of spruce pine, admirably fitted for masts and spars.
3We are still hewers of wood and drawers of water, but the spruce pine beetle is destroying our forests.
4The chief produce of the island is a kind of spruce pine, exceedingly straight and tall, which grows in great abundance.
5We found the tall trees to be a kind of spruce pine, very proper for spars, of which we were in want.
1Here, we investigated the effects of soil biota on growth of Pinus contorta, which has been introduced from Canada to Sweden.