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Some bird cherries, such as chokecherries, are used to make jelly and wine in North America.
Rowan, aspen, willow, grey alder, and bird cherry are common in the lower elevations.
Bird cherry may also refer to:
Bird cherries are sometimes used as a food plant by Lepidoptera species including brimstone moth.
Not to be confused with Prunus avium, meaning "bird cherry".
Through July to September, they will climb trees to eat bird cherries, pine cones, vines and grapes.
He entered a forest of mingled birch, mountain ash, bird cherry, and a kind of poplar.
Her offspring then proceed to grow and produce emigrants which develop on the bird cherry before flying to the oat species where they continue feeding.
Prunus avium means "bird cherry" in the Latin language.
Along some creeks there are Bird Cherry and Grey Alder.
The larvae feed on Bird Cherry.
Birch is usually dominant in these northern areas, but pine, aspen, rowan, bird cherry and grey alder are also common.
Wooden pipe is made of buckthorn, hazel, maple, ash tree, or bird cherry tree.
In English "bird cherry" often refers to Prunus padus.
Caterpillars also cause damage to quince, cherry, hawthorn, almonds, cotoneaster and bird cherry.
"Beneath the Shade of the Bird Cherry Trees and the Acacias", small cantata, op.
The host plant of the Bird-cherry Ermine is the Bird Cherry.
Amongst the species of tree that can be found are ash, birch, rowan and bird cherry along with shrubs such as hawthorn, hazel and holly.
Pines, birches, aspens, alders, sorbus, viburnum, bird cherries, and poplar grow in this area.
European Bird Cherry Prunus padus var.
The species lives in mixed forests of the lower altitudes, being found mainly on poplar, pine, larch, and Prunus species such as bird cherries.
Prunus padus is well named the bird cherry, for its black fruits are high on the animal and bird menu of gastronomic delights.
Watching badgers graze on bird cherries and elderberries in Gyhll Beck wood is certainly high on my list of happier wildlife experiences.
Cheremshyna is a name for the Prunus padus (Bird Cherry) in the Ukrainian language.
Prunus ssiori - Hokkaido bird cherry, (Hokkaidō)
In English "bird cherry" often refers to Prunus padus.
The taxon was described in 1864 by Miquel as Prunus padus var.
The larvae feed on Quercus and Prunus padus.
Prunus padus var.
Prunus padus is well named the bird cherry, for its black fruits are high on the animal and bird menu of gastronomic delights.
Cheremshyna is a name for the Prunus padus (Bird Cherry) in the Ukrainian language.
Hägg is also the Swedish name for the Bird Cherry (prunus padus), a species of cherry native to northern Europe.
In Finland, the blooming of bird cherry (Prunus padus, Finnish tuomi) signifies the start of the summer for many people.
Bird Cherry or Hackberry (Prunus padus; Paprastoji ieva)
Prunus padus, known as Bird Cherry or Hackberry, is a species of cherry, native to northern Europe and northern Asia.
As well as the other typical high bog plants the large flat raised bog provides habitat for the rare Sphagnum imbricatum and Prunus padus has been previously recorded.
The larvae feed on various plants, including Plantago, Taraxacum, Verbascum, Rumex, Lonicera and Prunus padus.
Taphrina padi is a fungal plant pathogen that induces the form of Pocket Plum gall that occurs on Bird Cherry (Prunus padus).
The larvae feed on Prunus padus, Rhamnus species (including Rhamnus frangula and Rhamnus cathartica) and Fraxinus excelsior.
Native tree species which have appeared since 1868 include Betula pendula, Quercus robus, Crataegus monogyna, Prunus avium and Prunus padus.
The larvae feed on birch, willow, Populus tremula, Prunus padus, Lonicera xylosteum, Tilia, Rhamnus frangula and Aster species.
It is very closely related to Prunus padus (Bird cherry), differing in the aristate tips to the leaf serration (blunt-pointed in P. padus), and the longer style in the flower.
The larvae feed on Prunus spinosa, Prunus padus, Prunus cerasus and other Prunus species, as well as on apples and Crataegus.
Larvae have been recorded on Aconitum septentrionale, Heracleum sphondylium, Lactuca sativa, Pastinaca sativa, Taraxacum vulgare, Lupinus polyphyllus and Prunus padus.
T. pruni produces a distinctive tongue-like growth, similar to other closely related species such as Taphrina alni on Alder (Alnus glutinosa) and Taphrina padi on Bird Cherry Prunus padus.