red fir: see pine.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Related content from HighBeam Research on: red fir
Is early life cycle success a determinant of the abundance of red spruce and balsam fir?(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Effects of species mixtures on growth and stand development of Douglas-fir and red alder. (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Geographic variation in chloroplast haplotypes in the California red fir-noble fir species complex and the status of Shasta red fir.(NOTE/NOTE)(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Chlorophyll fluorescence response of red spruce and balsam fir to a watershed calcium fertilization experiment in New Hampshire.(NOTE)(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Regeneration development under shelterwoods in a lowland red spruce--balsam fir stand.(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Long-term outcome of precommercial thinning in northwestern New Brunswick: growth and yield of balsam fir and red spruce.(Report) (Canadian Journal of Forest Research)
Squirrels save for the family's future.(red squirrels saving fir cones for the winter, and for young squirrels)(Brief Article) (Science News)
Two decades of change in vegetation in Adirondack spruce-fir, northern hardwood and pine-dominated forests1 (Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society)
Douglas fir: a pine, not a true fir.(Wood of the Month) (Wood & Wood Products)
True fir: Lightweight, light-colored wood (FDM)
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