Can someone help me identifying this tree?
Thanks anon
>>991241
Cottonwood was the first to come to mind, but the leaves are too long. Great Basin?
>>991241
aspen.
you can tell that it's an aspen because of the way it is.
>>991255
I've never seen an aspen in the wild without other aspens.
>>991255
They make the femanons on /b/ show aspens.
>>991241
looks like America, maybe southwest region, good luck with your google maps project
>>991290
It is north América but not in the united states.
And I want to know becasue I cut a branch out of it to make a slingshot (the one on the right)
>>991294
Why? Why? Why?
>>991297
Tree btfo, how will envirotards recover?
>>991297
Because slingshots are cool
>>991278
>you are now aware that no matter how many aspens it looks like it's really just 1
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.businessinsider.com/pando-aspen-grove-utah-oldest-largest-organism-2016-7
>>991331
I know man. There are larger "single" fungal bodies.
>>991354
Now I get it. Kek
>>991385
Yeah. I had to be there.
>>991294
If you really want to know, tell people where it is, dude. I'm just dying to Google that for you.
I know, interwebs and all. Audubon field guides are awsome though. First get Trees, Wildfowers, and Mushrooms. Then get NA Mammals, Birds and Weather. After a year if wondering around with them in your pack for a year, people will think you're a Native American scout.
>>991407
What another country looks like the South West and its in north America?
Yep, México. Central Mexico
>>991242
Are you all retards? It's an ash tree
>>991415
>ash tree
can't be. too many leaves.
>>991421
I know you're joking but it goes deeper than that because they're severely endangered right now
>>991415
>>991413
>>991415
I dont think its an ash tree because ash trees have seeds in this time of the year.
>>991421
The feels desu
>Drive past hundreds of acres of Ash skeletons every day
>Fucking Jap bugs
>>991344
Honey mushroom in Oregon
>>991241
I don't know about the tree, but I can identify the retard who doesn't know how to rotate pictures.
>>991492
Complain to the Home Depot on Michigan Ave. in Canton, Mi for importing the infested wood, and complain to the municipal township government for the monoculture that made the infestation possible to spread. Those are the entities responsible.
Can it be some sort of walnut?
Opposite, serrate leaves with three distinct veins radiating out directly from the petiole (stem) give it away as a Celtis species. They're called hackberry or sugarberry here in the eastern United States. No idea what species exist in Mexico. Celtis ehrenbergiana maybe?
t. ecologist
>>991241
Yup. It's a tree