In this vein, a team of researchers led by Associate Professor Kana Kamimura from the School of Science and Technology at Shinshu University, Japan, investigated tree movements under various forest ...
Destructive winds during storms and cyclones often cause tree failures, especially through uprooting and stem breakage.
The latest hotspots for Japanese knotweed in Suffolk are Ipswich, Lowestoft, Stowmarket, Sudbury and Bury St Edmunds. The appearance of Japanese knotweed changes with the seasons and is harder to spot ...
Around thirty species of bonsai tree will be displayed in the 35th edition of an exhibition at the Benalmádena House of ...
School children have helped plant more than 2,000 plants to create a ‘leaf shaped mini-forest’ in Brockenhurst ...
Although the Japanese river otter is not in paintings, the 1824 book Buko Sanbutsu Shi (List of Animals and Plants Found in ...
While you may want birds visiting your garden, there's an invasive weed species that could cause them to overstay their ...
The Cumbria Japanese knotweed hotspots for 2024 are: Carlisle with 34 infestations in a 4km radius, Maryport with 18, Workington with 15, Whitehaven with 23, Frizington with 47, Keswick with 31, ...
The invasive species is the scourge of gardeners and homeowners for being able to spread rapidly and in large quantities choking other plants and even damaging foundations.
New data has revealed the hotspots in Norfolk where invasive Japanese Knotweed has begun to thrive. The species is native to East Asia and was introduced to the UK in the 1800s where it has since ...
Recent wet weather has allowed an invasive species of plant to thrive across Oxfordshire. Japanese knotweed is native to East Asia and was introduced to the UK in the 1800s where it has since spread ...