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Trees could be biomass if they are sustainably grown. Old growth forests are not biomass.Grass could be biomass.
Trees
Compartimentalisation Of Decay In Trees
Decay is important because it becomes fertilizer for the trees and other plants.
There are literally hundreds of examples of trees. Some examples of trees include pines, oaks, maples, locust, apple, and pear trees.
The short answer is that growth rates are not everything with Redwood. In the growth rings, Redwood allocates tannins that help it resist decay. The closer the rings are together, the higher the concentration of tannins. Second-growth and plantation grown Redwood typically have large growth rings if managed under even-aged conditions, unless they are grown on longer rotations. Larger growth rings have less tannin per area than smaller growth rings. So if Redwood is grown to longer rotations under even-aged management or grown in uneven-aged management regimes, smaller growth rings lead to higher concentrations of the tannins that help it to resist decay.
Oak and maple are examples of deciduous trees (trees that loose their leaves).
try opening your eyes and looking at the plants/trees outside and around you!!
coniferous trees
Decay helps in the ecosystem by rotting in the gorund and turning into fertilize for the animals and it also tuns into plants trees and ext.
A lot of healthy trees growing.
we are stop the cutting of the trees and we are growth new plants and trees by dugging the trees