A tree line is the edge of the habitat at which trees are capable of growing. A tree line is different from a timberline. A timberline, often called a forest line, is the line where trees form a forest with a closed canopy.
the altitude above which trees can no longer grow
The tree line, also known as the timberline, is that altitude on a mountain where, due to lack of water, temperatures, etc, trees cease to grow.
The climate above the tree line is called the alpine climate, or the tundra.
Line
9494 at the tree line level
The boundary where vegetation ends is called the timber line or tree line.I cannot find proof of this but I think it is simply called the 'TREE LINE' - sincere apologies if this is not correct.
Usually, people who ask this question really want the answer to a different question -- can I trim a tree that encroaches into my land, can my neighbor cut down a tree that is on our mutual property line, can I take down a tree on my neighbor's land that poses a risk to my house? I point this out not to sound like a jerk, but only because the legal answer to "who owns the tree" doesn't usually answer the (real, underlying) question. Where a person plants a tree on his/her property that grows into a neighbor's property, the tree still "belongs to" the person who planted it. When nobody knows who planted a tree, the tree usually (that is, in most states) "belongs to" the neighbor on whose property most of the tree is now located. However, whenever a tree crosses property lines, whether it is the roots or the branches or the trunk that cross the line, the person on each side of the line can pretty much do whatever he/she wants to the tree on his/her side. Think of your property line as a geometric plane that extends up into the sky and down into the ground. If you don't like the branches on your side of the plane, you can cut them, no matter who "owns" the tree. If you don't like the roots on your side of the plane, you can grind them up. As a practical matter, this rule means that whenever one neighbor wants a boundary tree taken down, it will be coming down, because even if the tree-loving neighbor does not agree to have the work done (which is important - it means that most arborists will not agree to do the work), the tree-hating neighbor can still do enough violence to the tree on his/her side of the line that the tree will soon die and need to be removed. If you're in Massachusetts and have a boundary or other real estate question, call the Law Office of David R. Baron in Boston.
A tree line is a boundary such that trees no longer on one side of it. Often, the tree line is the maximum altitude at which trees grow.
The tree line or timberline is the edge of the habitat at which trees are capable of growing. Beyond the tree line, they are unable to grow due to inappropriate environmental conditions. source: Wikipedia "tree-line"
A real tree usually has none.
The joke where the punch line is Tree can't eat is: What did the tree eat? Tree can't eat
Tree forest
"Tree line" used in the sense of terrain, is where trees start or stop growing. Above the tree line it is too cold and rocky, below the treeline is savannah.
Nights Behind the Tree Line was created on 2003-09-23.
The feline made a beeline for the tree line to act as a point of reference.
The climate above the tree line is called the alpine climate, or the tundra.
The elevation of the tree line varies. The tree line is the point on a particular mountain above which no trees grow. Mt. Washington in New Hampshire is shorter than a number of mountains in North Carolina. Mt. Washington has a tree line. The taller mountains in North Carolina do not.
Above a certain elevation, temperatures are too low for plants or trees to grow. The climate above the tree line is like a tundra. Only low plants, mosses, and lichens can grow there. That is a tree line.
the tree line