Tasmanian pine - definition. What is Tasmanian pine
Diclib.com
قاموس ChatGPT
أدخل كلمة أو عبارة بأي لغة 👆
اللغة:

ترجمة وتحليل الكلمات عن طريق الذكاء الاصطناعي ChatGPT

في هذه الصفحة يمكنك الحصول على تحليل مفصل لكلمة أو عبارة باستخدام أفضل تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي المتوفرة اليوم:

  • كيف يتم استخدام الكلمة في اللغة
  • تردد الكلمة
  • ما إذا كانت الكلمة تستخدم في كثير من الأحيان في اللغة المنطوقة أو المكتوبة
  • خيارات الترجمة إلى الروسية أو الإسبانية، على التوالي
  • أمثلة على استخدام الكلمة (عدة عبارات مع الترجمة)
  • أصل الكلمة

%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

TERRESTRIAL ECOREGION IN TASMANIA, AUSTRALIA
Tasmanian Temperate Rain Forests; Tasmanian Temperate Rainforests; Tasmanian Temperate Rainforest; Tasmanian temperate rainforest; Tasmanian rainforest; Tasmanian Rainforest; Tasmanian Rain Forest; Tasmanian rain forest; Tasmanian Rainforests; Tasmanian rainforests; Tasmanian rain forests; Tasmanian Rain Forests; Tasmanian temperate rain forest; Tasmanian cool temperate rainforests; User:Jordz1412/sandbox; Tasmanian Cool Temperate Rainforests; Tasmanian temperate rain forests
  • Callidendrous forest at streams edge at Growling Swallet
  • New plantlets forming at the end of the fronds of the Mother spleenwort

L. G. Pine         
BRITISH GENEALOGIST
Leslie Gilbert Pine; L.G. Pine; Leslie G. Pine; Leslie pine; Leslie Pine
Leslie Gilbert Pine (22 December 1907 – 15 May 1987) was a British writer, lecturer, and researcher in the areas of genealogy, nobility, history, heraldry and animal welfare.
Tasmanian languages         
  • 1903 recording
  • Recording the songs of [[Fanny Cochrane Smith]] by using a [[phonograph]].
  • Tasmanian language families per Bowern (2012). Oyster Bay and SE are clearly related. Northern and Western may be as well.
  • Tasmanian languages according to Dixon & Crowley (1981). Grey was uninhabited at time of contact.
EXTINCT GROUP OF LANGUAGES INDIGENOUS TO THE ISLAND OF TASMANIA, AUSTRALIA
Tasmanian language; ISO 639:xtz; Languages of Tasmania; Flinders Island lingua franca
The Tasmanian languages were the languages indigenous to the island of Tasmania, used by Aboriginal Tasmanians. The languages were last used for daily communication in the 1830s, although the terminal speaker, Fanny Cochrane Smith, survived until 1905.
Lambert pine         
  • Sugar pine starting to succumb to white pine blister rust
  • Old sugar pines in the [[Rogue River – Siskiyou National Forest]], southern Oregon
  • Bark of a sugar pine on [[Mount San Antonio]]
  • Almost ripe female cones
SPECIES OF EVERGREEN TREE
Sugar Pine; Sugar pine; Sugarcone pine; Sugar cone pine; Sugar-cone pine; Lambert pine
·- The gigantic sugar pine of California and Oregon (Pinus Lambertiana). It has the leaves in fives, and cones a foot long. The timber is soft, and like that of the white pine of the Eastern States.

ويكيبيديا

Tasmanian temperate rainforests

The Tasmanian temperate rain forests are a temperate broadleaf and mixed forests ecoregion in western Tasmania. The ecoregion is part of the Australasian realm, which includes Tasmania and Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea, New Caledonia, and adjacent islands.

Rainforest communities in Australia are classified as closed forests in which the canopy comprises 70–100% cover. It can be divided into tropical, subtropical, monsoon and temperate rainforest. Tasmanian rainforest is classified and as cool temperate rainforest, it represents the most floristically complex and best developed form of this forest type in Australia. In Tasmania, they can be found in the West, Savage River National Park, South West, North East and in patches on the East Coast. On the mainland of Australia, cool temperate rainforest have a wide variety of woodland trees, but Tasmania only has a limited number of woodland and vascular plants such as mosses, liverworts, lichen and fungi. Because of this, the definition of Tasmanian cool temperate rainforest was redefined in the 1980s to allow for communities that did not meet the canopy requirements and clearly separate cool temperate rainforest from mixed forest; The current definition states that cool temperate rainforests are those with trees usually greater than 8 m (26 ft) in height and capable of regenerating in the absence of large scale catastrophic events, such as fire. These forests are climax vegetation and are dominated by angiosperms such as Nothofagus cunninghamii (myrtle beech), Atherosperma moschatum (sassafras), and Eucryphia lucida (leatherwood) as well as gymnosperms such as Athrotaxis selaginoides (King Billy Pine), Lagarostrobos franklinii (huon or macquarie pine) and Phyllocladus aspleniifolius (celery-top pine). The limited number of woody species is thought to be due to repeated glaciation.

Tasmanian cool temperate rainforest can be divided into four types: Callidendrous rainforest, Thamnic rainforest, Implicate rainforest and Open Montane. These four major types differ in many of their characteristics such as structure, floristics, distribution, level of endemism and ecology.