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Tree |
Profile | Leaf | Bark | Characteristics |
| Lodgepole Pine |
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A tall, slender, straight tree which grows throughout most of the Interior |
| Balsam Fir |
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The balsam fir is found in forests in the northern half of Wisconsin, usually growing with white spruce in cool, moist, or shaded places. Balsam fir trees are medium sized, standing about 40-60 feet with a trunk diameter of 1-2 feet. Look for bark that is thin, smooth and grayish, marked by blisters filled with resin or balsam pitch. |
| White Poplar |
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White poplar - a small, short-lived tree growing up to 40 feet tall; white poplar has a smooth, nearly white bark that roughens and darkens with age. Round-oval leaves, which flutter in a slight breeze, are borne on slender flattened leafstalks. |
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A large tree with a narrow crown, it can grow to 40 meters tall and 1 meter in diameter when mature. | ||
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A small, slow-growing tree, up to 20 meters tall and 25 centimeters in diameter. It often has a characteristic cluster of branches at the top forming a club or crow's nest. | |
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A small tree or multi-stemmed shrub that grows to 12 meters tall, armed with sharp thorn-like shoots and bearing showy white flowers from mid April to early June. | |
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A small to medium-sized tree, often with many stems, up to 30 meters tall. It has a slender trunk that often curves before extending to the narrow, oval-shaped crown. In the open, the crown is pyramid-shaped. | |
| Unknown |
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| Unknown |
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