Sentence examples for useful tree from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

However, it was considered a useful tree for "enviroscaping" to conserve energy in south Florida, since it is "not as aggressive as many exotic fig species," although it must be given enough space.

The problem of creating a useful tree is to find suitable guidelines to prune the tree.

The work is intended to establish a framework capable of giving useful tree inferences on state-of-the-art FISH data, which might be extended in future work to handle even harder problem instances and more realistic models of tumor evolution.

Similar(56)

PQR sort weakness in matrices with greater noise ratios may be related to the insertion of big R-nodes in the PQR trees it uses, which would hamper the construction of useful trees for those situations.

Bottle gourds, sugarcane, bananas, taro, yams, and two useful trees (i.e., the Asiatic paper mulberry, with bark used for cloth manufacture, and the American Triumfetta semitriloba, with bark used for rope making) were of aboriginal importation, as also probably were the husk-tomato, a small variety of pineapple, and the coconut.

However, sometimes the nurse stand is composed of large, branchy and useful trees of one or more alien tree species that could be used for timber, poles, fuelwood or charcoal (Geldenhuys & Bezuidenhout 2011).

In Nimla Bagh, Abdul Hakim is still counting the useful trees remaining in the vast gardens.

Local farmers - and everyone is one – are being trained how to better nurture their soil (without becoming dependent on expensive fertilisers) and are being taught to plant useful trees and how to germinate, nurture and graft citrus trees.

The natural-history museum used to lend the images to public schools statewide, preorganized in boxes for lectures on topics ranging from "Useful Trees" to "Life in a Congo Village" and "Minor Industries of New England".

According to Bagehot's guide, Steve Scott of the Forestry Commission, "This whole plantation's completely knackered".It is a sickening illustration of how fast ash dieback, C halara fraxinea, is attacking one of Britain's most elegant, ubiquitous and commercially useful trees.

Scarcity of high-value timber species reflected past logging, whereas abundance of light-demanding species, and species valued for fruits, provided evidence of human-aided forest restoration and 'enrichment' in terms of useful trees.

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