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Seeing the Wood for the Trees (Part II)

Series
Back Garden Biology
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We take a walk around a local park to admire more winter trees and see why conifers win over broadleaved trees as we move further North, but even they have to drop their needles during the winter in the farthest reaches of the Boreal forest.

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Back Garden Biology

Seeing the Wood for the Trees

In winter the bones of the trees are laid bare, giving us a chance to see their skeletons. Join Lindsay as she takes a tour round Wytham Woods in Oxford, showing you how to identify our common native trees from their bark and the shape of their branches.
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Back Garden Biology

The Worm that Turned

The species with the biggest biomass in any garden is almost certainly the earthworm. These humble denizens of our soil provide essential services by turning over soil and promoting plant growth.
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Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/
Transcript Available

Episode Information

Series
Back Garden Biology
People
Lindsay Turnbull
Keywords
biology
ecology
trees
plants
Department: Department of Plant Sciences
Date Added: 25/01/2021
Duration: 00:13:05

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