I’ve been working on tree identification for the past two years. While I have a book for the Southeast, the New England area is a different story. Because I haven’t gotten a book yet, I rely on the internet (scary notion) for my information. I noticed a problem in both looking online and trying to identify tree leaves still on the tree vs. fallen tree leaves. Their sizes don’t always match.
This is not specifically a New England issue, just one I noticed since not relying on a book. I had no idea what this problem was, and the frustration of seeing skinny oak leaves with the same names as wide oak leaves increased. I started to wonder if New England tree naming was the same as Boston street naming, have several different trees with the same name, and only the locals will know what’s going on.
Well, one day in my terrestrial ecosystems and the carbon cycle class had a lecture on
I’ve been working on tree identification for the past two years. While I have a book for the Southeast, the New England area is a different story. Because I haven’t gotten a book yet, I rely on the internet (scary notion) for my information. I noticed a problem in both looking online and trying to identify tree leaves still on the tree vs. fallen tree leaves. Their sizes don’t always match.This is not specifically a New England issue, just one I noticed since not relying on a book. I had no idea what this problem was, and the frustration of seeing skinny oak leaves with the same names as wide oak leaves increased. I started to wonder if New England tree naming was the same as Boston street naming, have several different trees with the same name, and only the locals will know what’s going on.Well, one day in my terrestrial ecosystems and the carbon cycle class had a lecture on
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