The turpentine sap from the Pine Tree is generally used as a fire kindling or torch fuel.
any combustible can provide the fuel
Wood+Fire=Coal OR Tree+Fire=Coal
Natural wood is the best fuel for a fireplace. Large logs are typically considered the fuel for a fire, but in order to get the fire started, you need some smaller pieces of wood, called kindling. A great way to go for easy fire starting with natural wood is to use fatwood kindling that has tree resin in it, which allows it to ignite easily.
A fire requires 3 elements: a fuel source, an oxidant, and a source of heat. Furthermore, all 3 elements need to be in the correct ratios, otherwise a fire will not be formed or sustained. Also, the fuel source is required to be vapourised before it can react with the oxidant. An example of this is a tree burning in a forest. The tree provides fuel in the form of hydrocarbons (hydrogen and carbon), and the air provides the oxidant in the form of oxygen. Sunlight could provide enough heat source to drive the tree to combust. The heat source helps to vapourise the fuel so that is can react with the oxidant (the tree bark/wood goes from solid to vapour at the surface where heat is applied). The force/speed of wind can help provide enough oxygen to power the fire, but it can also provide too much oxygen which would put out the fire. A strong wind could also blow all the vapourised fuel away from the heat source and stop the fire.
Fire ants can damage a tree by nesting in its roots and causing stress, but they typically do not directly kill a healthy tree.
they die and it is a seedling of a reedwood. a baby tree.
The tree catches fire and it dies.
There are many precautions that can be taken against a Christmas tree fire. For exmaple, keep lamps far from the tree (could egnite a fire), use only UL approved electrical decorations, place the tree far away from fire places or heated areas and unplug the Christmas tree lights when not in use.
The obvious choice for fuel is natural wood. A great way to get a fire started quickly and easily, while still using natural wood, rather than chemical soaked fake logs, is to use fatwood. Fatwood has tree resin in it that allows it to ignite easily. Once you get your fire started, adding larger logs that will burn for a long time are the best fuel.
Carbon oxidation/reduction. The carbon typically comes from tree wood (eg a forest fire) or fossil fuel (coal or oil).
well the tree would probably set on fire and the dead wood could possibly be used for fire
The tree seed that only germinates after a fire is the serotinous cone of the lodgepole pine. The heat from the fire causes the cones to open and release the seeds, allowing them to germinate in the newly cleared landscape.