Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Laurisilva of Madeira' has mentioned 'Evergreen' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
The forest is characterized by broadleaf tree species with evergreen, glossy and elongated leaves, known as "laurophyll" or "lauroid".
The canopies are evergreen, dominated by species with glossy- or leathery-leaves, and with moderate tree diversity.
Laurel forests are characterized by evergreen and hardwood trees, reaching up to 40 metres (130xc2xa0ft) in height.
Most Laurel forest species are evergreen, and occur in tropical, subtropical, and mild temperate regions and cloud forests of the northern and southern hemispheres, in particular the Macaronesian islands, southern Japan, Madagascar, New Caledonia, Tasmania, and central Chile, but they are pantropical, and for example in Africa they are endemic to the Congo region, Cameroon, Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda, in lowland forest and Afromontane areas.
[9] Some forests are dominated by Lauraceae, while in others evergreen laurophyll trees of the beech family (Fagaceae) are predominant, including ring-cupped oaks (Quercus subgenus Cyclobalanopsis), chinquapin (Castanopsis) and tanoak (Lithocarpus).
In the temperate zone, the cloud forest between 2,000 and 3,000xc2xa0m altitude supports broadleaved evergreen forest dominated by plants such as Quercus lamellosa and Q. semecarpifolia in pure or mixed stands.
In ancient times, laurel forests (shoyojurin) were the predominant vegetation type in the Taiheiyo evergreen forests ecoregion of Japan, which encompasses the mild temperate climate region of southeastern Japan's Pacific coast.
There were three main types of evergreen broadleaf forests, in which Castanopsis, Machilus, or Quercus predominated.
Changjiang Plain evergreen forests (China) Chin Hillsxe2x80x93Arakan Yoma montane forests (Myanmar) Eastern Himalayan broadleaf forests (Bhutan, India, Nepal) Guizhou Plateau broadleaf and mixed forests (China) Nihonkai evergreen forests (Japan) Northern Annamites rain forests (Laos, Vietnam) Northern Indochina subtropical forests (China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam) Northern Triangle subtropical forests (Myanmar) South Chinaxe2x80x93Vietnam subtropical evergreen forests (China, Vietnam) Southern Korea evergreen forests (South Korea) Taiheiyo evergreen forests (Japan) Taiwan subtropical evergreen forests (Taiwan)
Tree Heath (Erica arborea) grows in southern Iberia, but without reaching the dimensions observed in the temperate evergreen forest or North Africa.
Azores temperate mixed forests Canary Islands dry woodlands and forests Madeira evergreen forests
According to the recent study by Box and Fujiwara (Evergreen Broadleaved Forests of the Southeastern United States: Preliminary Description), laurel forests occur in patches in the southeastern United States from southeast Virginia southward to Florida, and west to Texas, mostly along the coast and coastal plain of the Gulf and south Atlantic coast.
In the southeastern United States, evergreen Hammock (ecology) (i.e.
There are several different broadleaved evergreen canopy trees in the laurel forests of the southeastern United States.
In some areas, the evergreen forests are dominated by species of Live oak (Quercus virginiana), Laurel oak (Quercus hemisphaerica), southern magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora), red bay (Persea borbonia), cabbage palm (Sabal palmetto), and sweetbay magnolia (Magnolia virginiana).
In several areas on the barrier islands, a stunted Quercus geminata or mixed Quercus geminata and Quercus virginiana forest dominates, with a dense evergreen understory of scrub palm Serenoa repens and a variety of vines, including Bignonia capreolata, as well as Smilax and Vitis species'.
Gordonia lasianthus, Ilex opaca and Osmanthus americanus also may occur as canopy co-dominant in coastal dune forests, with Cliftonia monophylla and Vaccinium arboreum as a dense evergreen understory (Box and Fujiwara 1988).
The lower shrub layer of the evergreen forests is often mixed with other evergreen species from the palm family (Rhapidophyllum hystrix), bush palmetto (Sabal minor), and saw palmetto (Serenoa repens), and several species in the Ilex family, including Ilex glabra, Dahoon holly, and Yaupon holly.
In many areas, Cyrilla racemiflora, Lyonia fruticosa, wax myrtle Myrica is present as an evergreen understory.
There are however, several areas in Mediterranean California, as well as isolated areas of southern Oregon that have evergreen forests.
Several species of evergreen Quercus forests occur, as well as a mix of evergreen scrub typical of Mediterranean climates.
The laurel forest is the most common Central American temperate evergreen cloud forest type.
Tree species include evergreen oaks, members of the Laurel family, and species of Weinmannia, Drimys, and Magnolia.
There are still some temperate evergreen hills in the north.
The Yungas are typically evergreen forests or jungles, and multi-species, which often contain many species of the laurel forest.
The forest is mainly comprised of evergreen trees and bushes, with flat, dark green leaves.