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Euonymus alatus is the latin name for the "Burning Bush". It is deciduous, meaning that it loses its leaves every year. You can rake up the leaves and use them in compost or as mulch for other plants.
If if has a cone it's a conifer because it has needle -like leaves and a cone for seed making.... have you ever seen a bush with white kinda blue looking berries on it? that's a conifer because it makes seeds inside of it and it has needle-like leaves
They would be similar, as the cell is dividing through the process of mitosis.
Holly bush leaves and stems covered with a black velvety substance has sooty mold. You can get rid of it by pruning your bush to ensure that it gets enough sunlight. You then have to wash away the sooty mold. You can do this with a gallon of water that has a spoonful of dish soap added to it. Once you have cleaned the leaves, and stems, rinse the plant with the garden hose.
too much water and or fertilizer,
Tea is a small bush and its leaves are the raw material for the famous drink.
No. Burning Bush leaves are simple! -Anonymous Smiley :)
the leaves make photosynthesis
Euonymus alatus is the latin name for the "Burning Bush". It is deciduous, meaning that it loses its leaves every year. You can rake up the leaves and use them in compost or as mulch for other plants.
Tea is grown in bushes, but only the top leaves are picked/cut from the bush by a special machine. Then the tea goes through a process to make it the type of tea that you find on the shelves. Because of the way tea is harvested the actual bush it comes from can be thousands of years old.
Food you find in the bush. e.g: plants/leaves, grubs
Daphne. not right bush
Texas.
Photosynthesis
Holly
Black walnut leaves, rose bush leaves, and the Ohio Buckeye tree's leaves
A Holly Bush.