doghair
English
Etymology
From dog + hair, by analogy with the thick hair on the back of a dog.
Noun
doghair (uncountable)
- (forestry) Pine forest where the trees have grown extremely thin and close together.
- Hypernyms: forest, thesaurus:forest
- 1983, United States. Bureau of Land Management. Platte River Resource Area, Forest ecology/plant identification trail[1], page 7:
- Doghair stands result from too many pine trees regenerating following fire or clearcutting which opens the forest canopy.
- 1990, Olympic National Forest (N.F.), Land and Resource(s) ...[2], page 142:
- The acres of doghair will continue to decline, due to the experimental program.
- 2001, I Hear the Train: Reflections, Inventions, Refractions[3], →ISBN, page 55:
- In front of us was a stand of doghair pine, the kind of stunted, thin trees that grow close together like grass, each stem maybe three to six inches in diameter.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see dog, hair.