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It looks like a fig tree that's probably why the birds pooped the seed out in your yard lol
1. Tea tree oil for acne?
i hear that it does. i think you should try it since it's a healthy oil. i know that you would think no since too much oil on your skin is what got you in this mess, but i hear it works anyway. i have the opposite problem; dry skin and eczema. but it will be greasy at first but give it some time and it should absorb into your skin
2. If a connected graph has a unique spanning tree, then it is a tree.
Suppose $G$ has a unique spanning tree $T$. For contradiction, assume that $G$ is not a tree. Then $G$ has an edge $e = uv$ not contained in $T$. Since $T$ spans $G$, there is a $u,v$-path $P$ in $T$. Then $P e$ is a cycle in $G$. Form the tree $T'$ by starting with $T$, adding the edge $e$, and deleting one edge in $P$. You can verify that $T'$ is a spanning tree that is different from $T$:1) It is connected because $Pe$ is a cycle and no edge in a cycle is a cut-edge. 2) It is acyclic because adding $e$ created exactly one cycle, and removing an edge from $P$ removed that cycle.This is a contradiction, so $G$ must be a tree
3. Transplanting a Large Ceder Tree?
Dig the new hole first and fill it with water. Then dig the tree out. Dig lots and lots of the roots out...as much as you can get. Do it now before winter sets in so the roots have time to settle in. Do not wait until spring when the sap is running. Oh, and do not fertilize it, but be sure it is watered daily for a week to 10 days. You may have to stake it at first. I use old pieces of garden hose to put rope through and then tie it to stakes. Good luck.
4. What is taller on average, a Mango Tree or a Coconut Tree?
The coconut tree is taller than the mango tree. The lanzones tree can grow as tall as the mango tree and taste good. The durian tree can grow taller than the coconut tree the reason why it is the favorite of the lightning volts. Go to the tropics and make familiarity with the different tropical and exotic edible fruit trees
5. Problem with a Ginkgo tree.?
If your plant was planted too deeply it would not have grown at all, they 'sulk' from the start. Ginkgo's are slow growing trees and they do need moisture to grow well. Fertilizer wo not help if the plant is not getting enough water and spikes work by water gradually dissolving the fertilizer and feeding it to the plant. If you've not had much water than it probably did not get much benefit from the spike either. The most important thing I've found with trees and I live in a particularly dry area is water. If I can not water them, they just go into 'survival' mode where they survive but you get no growth and a lot less leaves. If you have drought type conditions where you are you will have to water this plant say weekly in the dry part of the year. Just leave the hose running on it half turned on for 1/2 hour. Keep the soil moist but not over watered. I would not fertilize and stress it out any further until it goes into recovery mode. Give it a seaweed extract (from nurseries etc), I use seasol but there are a few, this is a plant tonic and it should help it along and get it going again without stressing it. Do not worry I think its only lack of water and if you provide this in dry times it should recover. Good luck
6. Disease on a Pine tree? Or is it Bugs?
The only thing I can find that fits this damage is Sirex Wasp (Sirex noctilio)? they eat young and old wood and then the tree starts to exude resin from the bark, needles wilt and turn brown...not good. infects: Pinus especially the Monterey pine, Larix-larches, Picea-spruces. In Europe the best thing is to inform the local forestry office- very serious over here, but in Canada? Creamy white larvae (like your photo) and a fungus often follows consuming the resin- quite a mess. not good news- but I hope it helps- could be wrong? I found the possible answer in a book of mine I strangely bought in a petrol station 10 years ago -How to get rid of garden pest and diseases, an illustrated identifier and practical problem solver by Andrew Mikolajski page 162. there's no number for the book itself so it might be out of print but its got fantastic colour pictures, helped me several times although when I was being taught at college to be an arborist this problem never came up? I suppose its very rare in England- never seen it in real life. I had to do a really deep search into my books at home to find anything like this- although I love problem solving- I would not want to have this in my garden- sorry for the bad news if I am right- however I could be (hopefully)very wrong. hope it helps.