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  2. Picea rubens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picea_rubens

    Red spruce is used for Christmas trees and is an important wood used in making paper pulp. It is also an excellent tonewood, and is used in many higher-end acoustic guitars and violins, as well as musical soundboard. The sap can be used to make spruce gum. [11] Leafy red spruce twigs are boiled with sugar and flavoring to make spruce beer. [16]

  3. Blue stain fungi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_stain_fungi

    Blue stain fungi. Blue stain fungi (also known as sap stain fungi) is a vague term including various fungi that cause dark staining in sapwood. [1] The staining is most often blue, but could also be grey or black. Because the grouping is based solely on symptomatics, it is not a monophyletic grouping.

  4. Red-breasted sapsucker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-breasted_Sapsucker

    Red-breasted sapsuckers nest in tree cavities. They begin work on creating a nest hole in a dead tree, usually a deciduous tree, [9] in April or May, and produces one brood per breeding season. The female lays 4-7 pure white eggs. Both parents feed the young, and the fledglings leave the nest at 23–28 days old.

  5. Spruce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spruce

    Spruce is the standard material used in soundboards for many musical instruments, including guitars, mandolins, cellos, violins, and the soundboard at the heart of a piano and the harp. Wood used for this purpose is referred to as tonewood. Spruce, along with cedar, is often used for the soundboard/top of an acoustic guitar. The main types of ...

  6. Spruce gum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spruce_gum

    Spruce gum. Spruce gum is a chewing material made from the resin of spruce trees. In North America, spruce resin was chewed by Native Americans and was later introduced to the early American pioneers and was sold commercially by the 19th century, by John B. Curtis among others. It has also been used as an adhesive.

  7. Abies balsamea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abies_balsamea

    Balsam fir is a small to medium-size evergreen tree typically 14–20 metres (46–66 ft) tall, occasionally reaching a height of 27 metres (89 ft). The narrow conic crown consists of dense, dark-green leaves. The bark on young trees is smooth, grey, and with resin blisters (which tend to spray when ruptured), becoming rough and fissured or ...

  8. Natural gum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_gum

    Humans have used natural gums for various purposes, including chewing and the manufacturing of a wide range of products – such as varnish and lacquerware.Before the invention of synthetic equivalents, trade in gum formed part of the economy in places such as the Arabian peninsula (whence the name "gum arabic"), West Africa, [3] East Africa and northern New Zealand ().

  9. Picea mariana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picea_mariana

    Picea mariana, the black spruce, is a North American species of spruce tree in the pine family. It is widespread across Canada , found in all 10 provinces and all 3 territories . It is the official tree of the province of Newfoundland and Labrador and is that province's most numerous tree.