Colors in Pennsylvania forests are relatively unchanged from last week due to markedly stable day-to-day weather that ...
It turns out there has been a secret hiding in gardens across the world this whole time, which could change our understanding of carbon storage. New research has pointed to two types of the tulip tree ...
This species, along with its close relative the Chinese tulip tree (Liriodendron chinense), belongs to an ancient lineage dating back 50-30 million years — a period marked by significant shifts in ...
A new study suggests that there is a third type of wood—known as “midwood”—that could explain the nanoscale architecture of the tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera), which contains ...
This means they absorb huge amounts of CO₂ from the air and store it in their wood. The tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera), ...
Tulip trees were long renowned for their carbon storage. Their unique wood may be responsible. For as long as scientists have studied trees, we have categorised them into two types based on the ...
My house is surrounded by massive, mature Liriodendron tulipifera — commonly known as tulip trees. They lend a forest feel to my front and back yards, and combined with understory trees and shrubs, ...
All trees are natural carbon sinks as they absorb rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, but until now, scientists have been unable to understand why certain trees – such as the tulip tree ...
Tulip Tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) towering over its neighbors in the Cambridge University Botanic Garden. This Tulip Tree is listed as a Champion Tree by The Tree Register of The British Isles.
This species, along with its close relative the Chinese tulip tree (Liriodendron chinense), belongs to an ancient lineage dating back 50–30 million years—a period marked by significant shifts ...