BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: NOUN
- A small mallee with rough dark-colored bark toward the butt; yields a red eucalyptus kino gum
- A tree native to eastern North America, Nyssa sylvatica.
- Eucalyptus stellulata.
- The water-tupelo, Nyssa biflora, a tree inhabiting wet ground along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
- A North American tree, Nyssa multiflora, 40 to 70 feet high, bearing a dark-blue berry.
- A deciduous tree (Nyssa sylvatica) of eastern North America, having glossy, somewhat leathery leaves that turn bright scarlet or orange in the fall.
- Small mallee with rough dark-colored bark toward the butt yielding a red eucalyptus kino
- Columnar tree of eastern North America having horizontal limbs and small leaves that emerge late in spring and have brilliant color in early fall
- Columnar tree of eastern North America having horizontal limbs and small leaves that emerge late in spring and have brilliant color in early fall
BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Yields a red eucalyptus kino gum
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BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: RELATED WORDS
- Sessile oak, Sweet birch, Nubuck, Genus liquidambar, Hamamelid dicot genus, Yellow birch, Ogeechee lime, Sweet chestnut, Spanish chestnut, Sour gum, Eucalytus stellulata, Black sally, Black mallee, Pepperidge, Nyssa sylvatica
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BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Cherry birch, Black oak, Incense tree, Black birch, Chestnut, Sessile oak, Sweet birch, Nubuck, Genus liquidambar, Hamamelid dicot genus, Yellow birch, Ogeechee lime, Sweet chestnut, Spanish chestnut, Sour gum
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BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Cypress, black gum, maple, Atlantic white cedar, and pine are the predominant tree species found on the refuge and support the wildlife within.
- Present and increasingly abundant red maple, white pine, black gum, oaks, and mountain laurel have grown due to the absence of fire.
- Among these are black gum, maples, sumac, sassafras, cherry and aspen, which are painting a wide palette in the region.
- Associated trees and shrubs include swamp black gum, red maple, sweet bay, buttonbush, fetterbush and dahoon holly.
- European cranberrybush viburnum, leucothoe, fothergilla, inkberry, sweetspire, sweet and swamp azaleas, white spruce and black gum.
- Black gum, poplar, oak and willow are some examples of vegetation that can produce abundant VOCs.
- The trails include boardwalks over interesting wetlands with black gum trees.
- The most prevalent tree species on the mountain are red and white oak, black gum, tulip poplar, black birch, and eastern hemlock.
- Black gum heartwood often rots, creating dens for wildlife, including black bears.
- These included sweet gum, white oak, hickory, black gum, willow, bald cypress, and sycamore.
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BLACK GUM vs NYSSA SYLVATICA: QUESTIONS
- What do wildfire black gum trees look like in the fall?
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