Well, isn't that a lovely question. Understory plants and larger timber trees, they all play their part in the beautiful dance of nature. Each one finds its own special place to soak up the sunlight and drink in the rain, creating a harmonious balance in the forest. Just like in a painting, every element has its own unique beauty and together they create a masterpiece of life.
Stem timber
Cultivation, power plants, timber...
By taking there seeds, fruits, roots, resin or timber.
Plantation timber is the trees typically of one species, that are planted to be commercially harvested. The production of plantation timber is done by cultivating and managing the trees on an area of agricultural land.
Timber wolves' size depends on the gender of the wolf. The female wolf is generally larger, and MUCH more aggressive than the male.
by building bigger towns cities and roads, clearing woods for timber, larger farming lands and more hunting. Waterways have been poluted resulting in sever animal extinction
They compete with one another. If they are trees, they may well end up long and thin. You may want this if you are growing trees for timber or telephone poles. If you are a farmer, you have to trade off the competition between plants in a field (which reduces the yield per plant) with the presence of more plants. Somewhere is the best number of plants per square metre to have.
Simple Greed.
The eastern diamondback is larger than the timber rattlesnake, and they would probably ignore each other in the wild.
An aftergrowth is a second growth, seen in plants like crops or timber after harvesting.
Rattlesnakes eat small mammals that feed on plants.
Wood comes from tall stemmed plants called trees.