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An OSU expert said his "archenemy for 30 years" has exacerbated drought conditions, affected human health with expanded seasonal allergies, and given rise to devastating wildfires.
A male prairie warbler sings from a branch of an Eastern red-cedar tree in Callaway County. Eastern red-cedar trees have historically provided Christmas trees and other wood products, from pencils to ...
Q&A: Advice for homeowners as Eastern Red Cedar helps fuel Oklahoma wildfires Since Friday, fires have burned through thousands of acres, destroyed hundreds of homes, and have taken at least four ...
There are the pros and cons about Eastern red cedar, as we see them. You'll have to make your own decision about whether an indoor living tree is worth the trouble. Advertisement ...
Just about everyone in Skiatook knows what an eastern red cedar is. It is the wild, native evergreen seen in abandoned fields and along fencelines. Although an attractive winter tree, it can be ...
This week, we meet Eastern red cedar or Juniperus virginiana, one of the most common coniferous trees in Indiana. This evergreen tree, also known as aromatic cedar, is unique in that it has both scale ...
An over-population of Eastern red cedar trees is like a cancer to the rangeland—aggressive, widespread and time-consuming to eradicate. Landowners in the High Plains have fought these ...
Oklahoma is getting $100,000 in stimulus money to help expand efforts to control the particularly invasive Eastern Red Cedar, but local entrepreneurs say burning is not the ...
Q. I am wondering what you might know about the small “red cedar trees” that seem to be invading fencerows and highways, especially U.S. 31 north of Kokomo. I think a column from you would be ...
The eastern red cedar is dioecious — which means the species has male and female plants. (A couple of other common Ozark trees that are dioecious are persimmon trees and Osage-orange, or ...
In a single Ozarks acre, you may see up to 250 Eastern Red Cedar Trees. “Back before man really settled in the area, wildfires would control the trees, for sure on the praries,” says Casaletto.
Fungal spores from a Malus sp. lands on a stem of Eastern red cedar and a small, dark brown gall begins to grow. By the end of the growing season this gall is just a bit larger than a golf ball.
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