Alder
♣
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Biome
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- Any temperate broadleaf forest
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Properties
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Deciduous
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no
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Density
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410
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Max trunk height
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{{{max_trunk_height}}}
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Max trunk diameter
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{{{max_trunk_diameter}}}
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Trunk branching
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{{{trunk_branching}}}
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Heavy branch radius
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{{{heavy_branch_radius}}}
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Branch radius
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{{{branch_radius}}}
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Root radius
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{{{root_radius}}}
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Heavy branch density
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{{{heavy_branch_density}}}
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Branch density
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{{{branch_density}}}
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Root density
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{{{root_density}}}
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Products
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Wikipedia article
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This article is about an older version of DF.
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Alder is a deciduous tree, it sheds leaves in fall. In reality, they can be from 5 to 30 meters tall, but the two most common variants Red Alder (originally from North America) and Black Alder (from Europe), both of which fall on the 30 m side. Both have been reintroduced beyond their original range, and are quite common. If you've ever seen some trees, chances are you've seen some alders. The name has to do with the bark, most likely.
How red alders (the greenish ones in the middle) look
How red alders can look, in winter
How red alders should look
Where baby alders come from
What adult alders should be
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[PLANT:ALDER]
[NAME:alder][NAME_PLURAL:alders][ADJ:alder]
[USE_MATERIAL_TEMPLATE:STRUCTURAL:STRUCTURAL_PLANT_TEMPLATE]
[BASIC_MAT:LOCAL_PLANT_MAT:STRUCTURAL]
[AUTUMNCOLOR]
[USE_MATERIAL_TEMPLATE:WOOD:WOOD_TEMPLATE]
[STATE_NAME:ALL_SOLID:alder]
[STATE_ADJ:ALL_SOLID:alder]
[PREFIX:NONE]
[TREE:LOCAL_PLANT_MAT:WOOD][TREE_TILE:5]
[PREFSTRING:catkins]
[PREFSTRING:autumn coloration]
[DRY]
[BIOME:ANY_TEMPERATE_BROADLEAF]
[SAPLING]
[SOLID_DENSITY:410] |