stand
A group of trees sufficiently uniform in species, age, and condition to be managed or described as a unit. A stand of lodgepole pine. A stand of old-growth Douglas fir. The word treats a portion of forest as a community with a shared identity — distinct from its neighbors, identifiable from the air, bounded by differences in species, height, or density.
Etymology
Probably from the notion of trees "standing" together. In use in forestry since at least the 19th century.
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