Fast Growing Trees

 American Linden Trees
 American Sycamore Trees
 Arapaho Crape Myrtle Trees
 Autumn Blaze Maple Trees
 Autumn Purple Ash Trees
 Bald Cypress Trees
 Cleveland Pear Trees
 Dawn Redwood Trees
 Douglas Fir Trees
 Dynamite Crape Myrtle Trees
 Eastern Redbud Trees
 Elberta Peach Trees
 Empress Trees
 Eucalyptus Trees
 Ginkgo Trees
 Green Ash Trees
 Heritage River Birch Trees
 Hybrid Poplar Trees
 Italian Cypress Trees
 Japanese Cedar Trees
 Leyland Cypress Trees
 Loblolly Pine Trees
 Lombardy Poplar Trees
 Mimosa Trees
 Muskogee Crape Myrtle Trees
 Natchez Crape Myrtle Trees
 Norway Maple Trees
 Nutall Oak Trees
 October Glory Maple Trees
 Oklahoma Redbud Trees
 Paper Birch Trees
 Pin Oak Trees
 Pink Dogwood Trees
 Pink Velour Crape Myrtle Trees
 Quaking Aspen Trees
 Red Maple Trees
 Red Mulberry Trees
 Red Rocket Crape Myrtle Trees
 River Birch Trees
 Sawtooth Oak Trees
 Scarlet Red Maple Trees
 Siren Red Crape Myrtle Trees
 Sycamore Trees
 Thornless Honeylocust Trees
 Thuja Green Giant Trees
 Tulip Poplar Trees
 Tuscarora Crape Myrtle Trees
 Weeping Willow Trees
 White Pine Trees
 Willow Hybrid Trees
 Willow Oak Trees
Fast-growing trees could take root as future energy source
Hybrid poplars A tree that can reach 90 feet in six years and be grown as a row crop on fallow farmland could represent a major replacement for fossil fuels. Purdue University researchers are using g