释义 |
Definition of gumland in English: gumlandnounˈɡʌmland mass nounNZ Land on which kauri trees once grew, often still yielding valuable kauri resin but typically with poor-quality soil. he took waste gumland and made clean and productive pasture Example sentencesExamples - Another explanation could be a reduction in vigour of trees grown in the heavy gumland clay soil.
- Burning the forest, however, results in degradation to a virtually sterile "gumland", for an indefinite period.
- Gumland soils are confined mainly but not entirely to flat land or moderate slopes.
- The gumland soils cover 600 square miles and are of three main types.
- The species was completely absent in gumland clays and pumice soils.
- In experimental sowings on newly developed gumland, inoculation of clover gave significantly improved results over uninoculated clover.
- By 1895, Yelas had earned enough from gum to buy his own piece of gum-land in the Henderson Valley.
- The report called for the creation of gumland reserves that could be worked only by licensed diggers.
- The cheapest source of an oil for such purposes was also a derivative of the kauri, a slushy resin deposit found on old gumland or forest sites.
- Symptoms tend to be more severe on vines growing in the gumland clays of Auckland.
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