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WILD 3600 Exam 1 Questions – 100% Correct, Expert Verified Answers with A+ Grade Assurance

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WILD 3600 Exam 1 Questions – 100% Correct, Expert Verified Answers with A+ Grade Assurance Why you should know your plants ANSW 1. Provide food and cover 2. Attract Wildlife 3. Dictate Management 4. Certain plants exclude other plants and wildlife Woody ANSW plants that produce wood as their structural tissue (trees shrubs vines) Brambles ANSW usually refers to blackberries Grass ANSW monocots in the poaceae family Forb ANSW herbaceous flowering plant that is not a grass Herbaceous ANSW includes both grasses and forbs Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda) ANSW 1. needles 4-7 inches 2. Most Common Southern Yellow Pine 3. canopy closure at 8-10 years 4. First thin at 12-15 years 5. Final harvest (clearcut) 25-35 years Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris) ANSW 1. needles 8-18 inches in fascicles of 3 sometimes 4 2. More common in lower coastal plain 3. Fire tolerant 2-3 years 4. First thin 20-30 5. Final harvest 50-60 years White Oaks (Quercus spp) ANSW 1. Most common is white oak 2. Acorn Production 30-40 years old 3. Tips of white oak leaves rounded 4. 1/3 of trees considered good producers 5. Highly preferred 6. Acorn April to Fall (in one year) Red Oak (Quercus spp) ANSW 1. Most common are northern and southern red oaks 2. Tips of red oak leaves are pointed 3. 60% are considered good producers 4. Moderately preferred 5. 2 year cycle producer of Acorn Water Oak (Quercus Nigra) ANSW 1. Common in piedmont and coastal plain 2. Reliable producer 3. Smaller acorn allows for more wildlife to access it 4. Low fire tolerance 5. Moderately preferred

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Institution
WILD 3600
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WILD 3600

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WILD 3600 Exam 1 Questions – 100%
Correct, Expert Verified Answers with
A+ Grade Assurance
Why you should know your plants ANSW ✔✔ 1. Provide food and cover
2. Attract Wildlife
3. Dictate Management
4. Certain plants exclude other plants and wildlife


Woody ANSW ✔✔ plants that produce wood as their structural tissue (trees
shrubs vines)


Brambles ANSW ✔✔ usually refers to blackberries


Grass ANSW ✔✔ monocots in the poaceae family


Forb ANSW ✔✔ herbaceous flowering plant that is not a grass


Herbaceous ANSW ✔✔ includes both grasses and forbs


Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda) ANSW ✔✔ 1. needles 4-7 inches
2. Most Common Southern Yellow Pine
3. canopy closure at 8-10 years
4. First thin at 12-15 years
5. Final harvest (clearcut) 25-35 years

,Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris) ANSW ✔✔ 1. needles 8-18 inches in fascicles of
3 sometimes 4
2. More common in lower coastal plain
3. Fire tolerant 2-3 years
4. First thin 20-30
5. Final harvest 50-60 years


White Oaks (Quercus spp) ANSW ✔✔ 1. Most common is white oak
2. Acorn Production 30-40 years old
3. Tips of white oak leaves rounded
4. 1/3 of trees considered good producers
5. Highly preferred
6. Acorn April to Fall (in one year)


Red Oak (Quercus spp) ANSW ✔✔ 1. Most common are northern and
southern red oaks
2. Tips of red oak leaves are pointed
3. 60% are considered good producers
4. Moderately preferred
5. 2 year cycle producer of Acorn


Water Oak (Quercus Nigra) ANSW ✔✔ 1. Common in piedmont and coastal
plain
2. Reliable producer
3. Smaller acorn allows for more wildlife to access it
4. Low fire tolerance
5. Moderately preferred

, Sawtooth Oak (Quercus acutissima) ANSW ✔✔ 1. introduced and planted to
attract deer mainly
2. produces at 7-8 years
3. too large for turkeys to consume
4. drop for 2 weeks in early fall
5. Reliable producers and produce at young age


Common Persimmon (Diospyros virginiana) ANSW ✔✔ 1. Diecious (female
and male plants)
2. Males do not produce
3. Drop fruit during late summer/early fall
4. Highly attractive to wildlife


Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua) ANSW ✔✔ 1. Extremely common
throughout southeast
2. little wildlife use
3. Spike balls that fall
4. Invasive if not managed


Most common native warm season grasses ANSW ✔✔ Broomsedge bluestem
Little bluestem
Big bluestem
Indiangrass
Switchgrass


Native warm season grasses ANSW ✔✔ 1. Important for cover not food

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WILD 3600

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