Trees can be uprooted by strong winds in various storms, including hurricanes and tornadoes. Trees are mor easily uprooted if the soil is saturated.
I believe street trees are planted after old tree are cut down because, the old trees have outgrown their spot or are likely to collapse or uproot a street , sidewalk ,or structure so, the old trees are cut down and new trees are planted for beautification purposes.
No, an alder tree is not a conifer. While conifers are gymnosperms and are part of the Division Coniferophyta, alder trees are, in fact, angiosperms, otherwise known as Division Anthophyta.
Unwanted trees growing on their own are called weed trees.
* Thorn Apple Trees. * Locust trees * Lemon trees
Some ladybugs like oak trees, maple trees, and bannana trees.
yes
Yes, an EF1 and even an EF0 tornado can uproot trees, though it partly depends on the condition of the soil and how strong the root system is.
Tornadoes can snap and uproot trees, break tree limbs, and uproot smaller plants.
It could uproot trees and lay waste to town where humans live.
1. Can you help me uproot my plant and put it in the garbage?2. Sometimes, it takes a while to uproot a plant.3. Many trees are being uprooted because people are killing them.There are many other ways to use uproot in a sentence.
Uproot was created in 2008.
A tornado can potentially snap or uproot hundres or even thousands of trees. In strong tornado large swaths may be deforested with some trees lofted into the air.
wind is moving air.when gentle it can make leaves or twigs sway. but when it is strong it can uproot trees and destroy houses.
I believe street trees are planted after old tree are cut down because, the old trees have outgrown their spot or are likely to collapse or uproot a street , sidewalk ,or structure so, the old trees are cut down and new trees are planted for beautification purposes.
Nope. They are easy to uproot. Unless you are a weakling.
They can, yes, though they area rare in most rainforest areas. Whent hey do occur they can damage, snap, and uproot trees.
Tornadoes have little effect on the geosphere. They can cause erosion and, in rare cases, scouring of the soil and they can uproot trees, which can increase erosion.