People are cutting down gum trees for various reasons, including land clearing for agriculture, urban development, and logging for timber. Gum trees are often seen as a resource for their wood, which is used in construction and furniture making. Additionally, invasive species management and the need for fire management in certain regions may also contribute to their removal. However, this practice can have significant environmental impacts, including loss of habitat and biodiversity.
Then they would get chopped down
Yes. The pioneers scraped the sap from the bark and used it as chewing gum
If you are talking about gum diggers in NZ, answer is Kauri trees.
you got all your information wrong you.
it is true that if you chew gum while cutting onions you will not cry
Yes, Kauri trees are endangered because of people in the old days chopping them down to make furniture or to sell there Kauri Gum
Gum leaves are leaves from the Eucalyptus tree. Australians commonly refer to Eucalyptus trees as gum trees.
Gum trees on average live to be 400 to 900 years old. However, some gum trees can live to be much older than this.
Gum digging is only in New Zealand; men and women used to dig gum from the old kauri trees around Auckland in the north island.
Gum Tree is a town in Mississippi that is named for a grove of gum trees found in the area.
trees
Red gum trees. They "suck" up the water underneath the ground and stop the salt from ancient oceans reaching the surface. The water shoots up the trunk and is then exerted through the leaves where it evaporates into the air. However, people are cutting down these important trees and the salt is rising to the surface at an alarming rate. Already kilometres of land have been deserted because it is unfit for other plants to grow and unsuitable for habitation. Many animals have died because of this.