Tree

Trees are generated structures of wood and leaf blocks, created when a map chunk is generated or grown from a planted sapling. They are found in most biomes, and are abundant in forest-related biomes. There are six "base" species of trees – oak trees, birch trees, spruce trees, jungle trees, acacia trees, and dark oak trees. All the trees can grow in many shapes and sizes.



Structure
Their natural height varies widely, but most have a minimum height of 5 blocks (4 wood and 1 leaf), ranging up to 30 blocks for the "giant" Jungle trees and 15 for the "small" Jungle trees

The tree canopy is composed of leaf blocks, and grows 1 block higher than the highest wood block (This does not apply to the giant oak tree, as the leaves grow 3 blocks higher). The canopy may begin from the ground, (for the shorter "bush trees" in the jungle) and go up to 6 blocks from the ground (for the tallest trees). Tree canopies appear to be generated from roughly spherical clusters of leaves about 5–7 blocks across, centered on sections of trunk or branches. Leaves must be supported by an adjacent trunk (or leaf blocks connected to the trunk), otherwise they will wither and disappear.

Giant oak and giant jungle trees grow branches (wood blocks connected horizontally, vertically or diagonally to the trunk or other branches). Most of the time, a single tree will have between one and six branches, and each branch will have between one and six wood blocks. A few trees can have many more. Branches support a much larger canopy than a tree with a single trunk. Birch and spruce trees cannot grow branches. Jungle biomes has a special type: "bush trees" (one block of jungle wood completely covered by leaves).



Growth and characteristics
See also: Tutorials/Tree Farming



Trees are grown from saplings, which have a 1/20 chance of dropping from leaf blocks when they are destroyed or decay. Some players harvest wood from high-efficiency tree farms. There are six species of saplings, corresponding to the six main trees: oak, birch, spruce, jungle, acacia and dark oak.

The sapling must be planted on a dirt, podzol or grass block, and must have a light level of at least 8 in the sapling block. A sapling will uproot with light level 7 or less in the sapling block itself unless it has an unobstructed view of the sky (except by glass or other fully transparent materials). The sapling must also have at least 4 blocks of space above it; see the individual sections below for space requirements, as they vary between the different types of trees. If there is a ceiling above a sapling, this will limit the maximum height of the tree that can grow from that sapling.

All trees in the active chunk radius around the player make attempts to grow at random intervals. For any given tree this can work out to about 3 attempts per minute, but a tree will usually not grow until nearly 30 minutes have elapsed since planting. When the tree attempts to grow it first checks that it has enough light, then chooses which variation of tree to spawn. For oak trees, it will choose either small or large; for spruce trees, it will choose either short, tall, or very tall. Birch trees only have one growable type, possibly hinting why they grow so fast.

Now that the tree has passed a light check and chosen a size to attempt, it checks if there is space to grow into what it has already (randomly) chosen to become. If it encounters an obstruction during this check, it fails to grow and must wait for the next pass before it can attempt to grow again. This means that a tree in an open field with enough light will grow quite quickly (usually right around the 30 minute mark), but a tree in a tree farm that stunts its size may make several attempts before finally growing.

''If you are standing on a sapling when it turns into a tree you will be trapped inside and begin to suffocate. You can escape by moving or digging. Sometimes, but rarely, this death results in deletion of items.''

Bone meal forces the tree to grow if right clicked as long as all of the normal checks are in place (i.e., light, space, dirt, etc.). It does not guarantee a tree will grow, but forces it to attempt to grow, regardless of light level. The tree must still pass the space check for its randomly chosen type, before it grows. This is important to remember when limiting tree height, as the tree may attempt to grow a tall variant and fail even when all other requirements are met.

Leaves of small oaks (but not large ones) will destroy fences, glass, paintings, stairs, pistons, torches, buttons, ladders and doors due to a mismatch between the tree's actual and test forms. While tree trunks will not grow through solid blocks, the branches of large oaks may grow through (replace) any blocks that are not directly above the trunk, including chests. Oak leaves are unique in being able to grow through leaves of other tree types.

All saplings will grow normally in The Nether and in The End, although they must be planted in dirt transported from the Overworld. Leaf blocks in the Nether have the same color as if they were placed in a desert biome.

Oak trees
Oak trees are unique in several ways compared to birch, spruce, jungle, acacia and dark oak trees. Oak trees have a much smaller space requirement, and while birch, spruce, jungle, acacia and dark oak trees can only grow through other leaves of their own type, oak trees will grow into any other leaf block. Oak and dark oak trees are also the only species of trees that can drop an Apple when their leaf block is destroyed.

They come in several variants with widely different properties:
 * 1) Small oak trees are the most commonly encountered, and resemble birch trees in their shape and size. They require no horizontal clearance at the base, 1 block around the main trunk, 2 blocks from the top of the trunk up to the ceiling and 6-8 blocks of vertical clearance. Thus, a small oak tree can grow in a 1 deep hole, but not a 2 deep hole. Just as jungle trees, their growth will not be hindered by wood, leaves, dirt and saplings. The small oak tree was the first tree to exist in Minecraft, dating back to Survival Test.
 * 2) Large oak trees are more uncommon, and have a distinct look and different growth requirements. They often have "branches", outgrowths of wood on the sides of the trunk, or even freestanding and surrounded by leaves. They require 4-14 blocks of open space directly above the sapling to grow (Air or Leaves only) but can otherwise be completely enclosed on all sides. These have existed since Infdev.
 * 3) * A large tree form exists with a single leaf block layer above the minimal 4-block trunk, allowing a tree to rarely grow in a vertical space with a height of only 5, but otherwise the maximum trunk height is 2 less than the vertical space, making the practical minimum height 6.
 * 4) * A large tree can be forced to be grown if a "brace" of non-solid blocks (e.g. glass, or half-slabs) is placed around where the trunk will be, one block off the ground. Balloon Oak Tree.png
 * 5) Balloon oaks are a rare tree that can also grow. These trees were found abundantly in most all versions of classic. They consisted of tall trunks and leaves that formed the shape of a "ball". However, these trees are quite rare in later versions of Minecraft. They will grow even if there is a block obstructing them; they simply grow around that block, meaning a player intending to have a large oak tree may end up with one of these. They usually contain 4 blocks of wood, but some may contain more. Balloon oak trees are the only type of tree that has the possibility of all logs being covered with leaves.
 * 6)  In swamp biomes, naturally occurring oak trees tend to grow in the water. Unlike oak trees in other biomes, which typically have a slightly conical or pointed canopy, all swamp trees have round, flat topped canopies, and may have vines hanging down. Read more about this tree in the Ungrowable Trees section.

Spruce trees
Spruce trees, also known as pine trees, grow from spruce saplings and have growth patterns and requirements very similar to birch trees, though they look very different. They are mainly found in the Taiga biome, but they may also generate in Extreme Hills, Cold Taiga, and Mega Taiga biomes. Spruce wood has the same texture as oak wood, but it is a darker shade of brown; its leaves are more dense, with a darker and blueish tone.

There are two different forms of these trees that may grow from any spruce saplings:
 * 1) A regular variant with a height similar to oak trees.
 * 2) A large 2×2 variant that generates in the Mega Taiga biome and can be grown from spruce saplings arranged in a 2x2 square, with or without bonemeal. They are commonly called "Redwoods" or "Mega Spruce Trees".  The saplings need two squares in any direction (thus a 6x6 square) and 16 squares of open space above (or more).

The leaves of the short variant tend to grow in discrete rows rather than the more "spherical" arrangement of oaks and birch trees; the tall variants tend to have very few leaves, concentrated at the top.

Like birch trees, they do not grow branches, and have a larger space requirement than oaks. This minimum space requirement is one block taller than the birch, at 5×5×8 blocks, and as with birch trees, they will not grow if any blocks occupy this volume. When height-constrained, the trunk height maximum is two less than the roof. Headroom of 9 blocks will limit the tree to trunk height of 7, which enables harvesting from ground level.

The trees with leaves at the very top are usually called spruce trees, while the ones with leaves all around are more commonly called pine trees.

Birch trees
Birch trees look fairly similar to small oak trees in terms of height, and with leaves of a paler color; however, they stand out with their unique white bark. They are most commonly found in birch forest biomes.

There are two types of birch trees: a shorter tree that can be grown by the player with birch saplings; and a taller, more rare tree which only generate in Birch Forest M biomes, and cannot be grown from saplings. Birch trees grown from saplings grow to be five, six, or seven blocks tall, making them easy to cut down. Birch trees always have leaves at least 2 blocks above the ground unless it was grown on a slope; the leaves on one side will have two blocks between the ground and leaves, while the other may have a gap of one block - steep slopes or cliffs may leave no space under the leaves. Because birch saplings only grow into the one type of tree, and due to their relatively fast grow rate, they are the preferred type in tree farms.

The smallest birch tree requires a 5×6 (diameter×height) volume of free space, whilst the tallest tree requires a 5×8 volume. The volume starts at one meter above the base of the sapling, and needs to be void of any block save for leaves of any type or birch wood. This allows for birch trees to grow next to other birches. The topmost 5×5 layer above the tree is always empty space, and saplings will not grow if this space is obstructed by other blocks (including torches). This behavior is different from oak trees, which will grow regardless of obstructions (usually not growing into the obstructed area). Dark wood trees behave similarly (see below).

Birch trees may grow faster than oak trees. A birch tree has been observed growing from sapling to fully grown tree in under one day. They appear to skip the thirty minute delay entirely; in very rare cases they even grow within a single minute. One player even claims that a birch tree grew immediately after planting a sapling. This has been reported for both SSP and SMP.

Birch trees yield a type of wood that can be made into the unique white Wood Planks, while the other trees yield various shades of brown.

Birch leaf distribution

Birch trees will always grow an absolute minimum of 50 leaves, which bodes well for the player considering the 1-in-20 chance for those leaves to drop saplings. If one is lucky, a birch tree may grow a maximum of 60 leaves. The leaf distributions are shown visually to the right, each table cell representing one 'slice' of the tree viewed from above. The glass blocks represent a barrier, while the cyan flowers represent areas where leaves may grow, but do not always. The growth pattern, in detail, is as follows:
 * The topmost row is one above the height of the tree, and always has exactly 5 leaves: one above the wood block and four orthogonally adjacent to it, forming a + shape.
 * 5 leaves
 * The second row is the top of the wood trunk, and also has 4 leaves adjacent to it. Diagonal to the wood block will be a minimum of 1 and a maximum of 3 additional leaf blocks.
 * 5 - 7 leaves
 * The third row has the wood in the middle, surrounded orthogonally and diagonally by leaf blocks. Those 8 leaf blocks are also surrounded orthogonally, for an additional 12 leaf blocks. One can think of this as a 5×5 space where every block has leaves except the four corners. These corners are randomly filled with between 0 and 4 leaves, though having all four filled is very rare.
 * 20 - 24 leaves
 * The fourth row generates with the same rules as the third, and thus has a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 24 leaf blocks.
 * 20 - 24 leaves
 * The fifth and sixth (bottom) rows contain no leaves, only the wood block in the center. If the tree is 6 or 7 blocks tall, the additional 1 or 2 rows at the bottom will also be just a wood block.
 * No leaves
 * The air space that surrounds the trunk.

Jungle trees


Jungle trees are exclusive to the Jungle biome and have a unique growth system. Jungle tree leaves drop jungle tree saplings, which appear tall and skinny like the jungle tree itself. When planted in grass or dirt they grow into a jungle tree with a 1×1 trunk, unlike the occasional jungle trees with a 2×2 trunk that you find naturally in the jungle biome. For these trees to grow, there must be no blocks adjacent to the sapling up to the height of the tree. In order to grow a 2×2 jungle tree, four jungle saplings must be placed adjacent to each other. For growth to succeed, there may be no blocks adjacent (even diagonally) to the north-western sapling (which is considered the center of the tree) up to the final height of the tree, as well as no blocks 1 block away except at the same level of the sapling (even diagonally). Which sapling the Bone Meal is used on is irrelevant. The largest jungle trees ever seen can grow up to 44 blocks high, although trees as short as 9 blocks have also been observed. Some materials (including wood, leaves, dirt and saplings, but not vines, farmland, or tall grass) block the growth of jungle trees.



2×2 jungle trees will not grow within two spaces of the trunk of another 2×2 tree directly north and west direction of the existing tree. On the south and east directions it will not grow within 3 blocks.

Acacia trees
Acacia trees are only found in the Savanna biome (their wood is also found in bonus chests). Acacia trees feature unique diagonal trunks, and may occasionally have multiple canopies. The way the tree forms is unique. Some have many straight logs and a curve at the top, some at the bottom, and some curve from bottom to top. Typically, the canopy consists of just two layers of leaves, sometimes three. They are usually quite small. A typical acacia tree is around eight blocks tall. The acacia leaves share their texture with oak leaves, although they have their own name in creative mode. Their colour, however, varies on what biome you are in. Acacia leaves have a chance of dropping acacia saplings, which can be grown into acacia trees. Their logs are grey on the outside, with an orangish inside, and acacia planks are a similar shade of red as the inside of the logs. Before the unique log was added, these trees used jungle logs as a placeholder. There are 3 types of acacia tree that can grow:


 * 1) The common acacia tree, which has a diagonal trunk and a single canopy.
 * 2) The Multi-canopy acacia, where the trunk forks around the middle of the plant and each end ends in a canopy.
 * 3) Another form of multiple canopy acacia tree, which has the straight trunk and a lower canopy, then the trunk grows out of the smaller canopy and has a second higher canopy. These trees are much taller than the common acacia tree.

Dark oak trees


Dark oak trees are found only in the Roofed Forest biome. They have thick, 2×2 trunks, and will spawn dirt one block under their trunk if generated in a cliffside. Dark Oak trees nearly always generate with irregular blocks of wood connected to the trunk- these represent large branches. Their bark texture is slightly lighter than Spruce logs, but the planks made from them are significantly darker. Growing these trees requires four dark oak saplings arranged in a 2×2 grid; they will not grow if planted individually. Before the unique log was added, these trees used spruce logs as a placeholder. Dark oak trees grow at a much faster rate than most other trees.



Ungrowable trees
Some trees are not obtainable with saplings; they only appear with terrain generation, or if a player manually makes one. Some are made from logs and leaves of other species. These trees include:

"Matchstick" spruce trees
A variant of Spruce trees with leaves only at the very top. These trees aren't rare and they don't have many leaves on them. This makes it easy to obtain wood from these trees, without the hassle of decaying leaves; they only have nine or twelve. Though somewhat common, they do not make up the majority of the trees in cold or snowy biomes. They cannot be found in Ice Plains, Extreme Hills, or any variant of those biomes. They are only rare within biomes that mega spruce trees spawn in, and are found in all the Taiga biomes.

"Lollipop" spruce trees
These trees are very similar to matchstick spruces; however, they have a lot more leaves. As such, they give a lot more saplings than the matchstick spruce which rarely produce even a single sapling. The leaves on this tree are arranged in a "diamond" shape. Just like the matchstick spruce tree, these trees can't be found in the Ice Plains, Extreme Hills, or any variant of those biomes. However, these trees are also seen in all the Taiga biomes. These trees also tend to be a little bit shorter than the matchstick spruce trees, but by a block or two.

Tall birch trees
Unlike the normal birch tree, these variants of birch trees have taller trunks than normal. They are found in the Birch Forest M biome. This makes them considerably rare, considering that the biome that they are in is also considerably rare. However, they are very convenient for gathering large quantities of birch wood, or any wood for that matter. This makes them a good biome to start with if you are new to the game.

Bush trees
Found in Jungle biomes, they only have 1-2 logs and a few leaves. Typically are 1-3 layers tall and cover the floor of Jungle biomes heavily. In jungles, they consist of oak leaves and a jungle log. Elsewhere, they consist of oak leaves and an oak log.

Swamp trees
Found in swamp biomes, these trees are made of oak wood logs and oak leaves. They are covered in vines and have a large amount of leaves, causing the misconception that the leaves have a higher percentage to drop apples.

Cold-en oak trees
The Cold-en Oak, or winter oak, is a tree formed by a rare glitch in Pocket Edition. They can be found in both the free and paid versions of the MCPE. It causes a small tree with a leaf arrangement the same as that of small oak or birch to be generated on the border of a forest and a snowy area (one of which is usually mountainous). It is composed with spruce leaves and spruce logs (seen in the lite and paid versions) or oak logs (paid only). As of 0.9.0 it only appears in maps with the "legacy" world type on.

Acaci-oak trees
Occasionally, when an oak tree spawns in a savanna biome, there is a rare glitch when it spawns with acacia leaves instead of oak leaves (but the oak trunk still remains). Oak trees do generate in the savanna, but with oak leaves like normal. This glitch is hard to see since the texture for acacia and oak leaves are exactly the same, though they do not stack with each other, and drop different saplings.

Fallen trees
A Pocket Edition only structure. They are logs lying on their side, sometimes with vines and mushrooms.

Older trees
Before the unique log types were added, these trees borrowed other tree's leaves and wood.

Jungle acacia trees
The old acacia, spawned before 13w43a, was composed of jungle logs and oak leaves. It still, however, spawned in the same formation as it currently does.

Spruce dark oak trees
The old dark oak tree, spawned before 13w43a, was composed of spruce logs and regular oak leaves, despite still spawning in the same formation as it currently does.

Pocket Edition Lite trees
Oak trees in Pocket Edition's free version are spawned with spruce wood, rather than oak wood, due to a bug in which it is unobtainable.

Uses
Tree harvesting is an essential first step for any player in Survival mode. The wooden blocks can be harvested for wood, without requiring tools (although an axe quickens harvesting). Each wood can be crafted into wooden planks and sticks, which are used to craft tools.

Wood can also be smelted into charcoal, an equivalent of coal.

When leaves are harvested, or decay naturally, there is a chance they will drop a sapling of their own species, which can be planted to grow a new tree. Decaying (dark) oak tree leaves also have a 1/200 chance of dropping an apple. Destroying leaves does not require a tool; a sword destroys leaves negligibly faster, but this quickly wears out the sword. Using a hoe to destroy a leaf block will not wear it out, but is the same speed as your hands. (However, on Pocket Edition, using a hoe will wear it out.) Shears harvest leaf blocks quickly, and will drop a usable leaf block for the player to pick up and later place elsewhere. Use of fire will also destroy leaves quickly, but when used on a tree, fire will also destroy much of the wood. (Fire is more useful when harvested leaf blocks have been placed elsewhere, as temporary barriers or filler blocks.)

Tips on cutting trees

 * It's worth clearing foliage and collecting the saplings and apples for later—you may want to reforest some areas. It's better not to use a tool to break the leaves, as a block or bare hands will do just as well without wearing out your tools.
 * If you've got plenty of daylight and you'll be hanging around for a while, you can just chop the wood out and wait for the leaves to decay. If there's any question of time, bash or shear the leaves (or at least most of them) first.
 * Shears do wear out, but will be much faster. The leaves won't drop saplings or apples when you shear them, but you get to take the leaf blocks home and break them at your leisure (or use them for something else).
 * When trying to cut a big tree (tall spruces, large oaks, jungle giants), the best technique is usually to get up to the top and cut the wood from there going down. Climbing to the top using ladders or vines, or throwing an enderpearl to the top is usually more efficient and safer than dirt pillars or "staircases", especially for very tall trees.
 * If you want to pillar to the top, using sand or gravel makes it easy to remove the pillar when you have cut your way to the bottom of the tree, as you can simply punch out the bottom block, and quickly place a torch under the falling sand. The sand will break as it lands on the torch, and you can easily pick it up.
 * Another way to cut big trees is to carve it into a spiral staircase and cut the remaining blocks on your way down.
 * When climbing large jungle trees you can shear vines from the sides of the tree you are not going to climb up to fill in the gaps on the side you are climbing up.
 * When cutting large jungle trees, make sure to cut all the logs in the branches, otherwise the leaves won't decay. It is easier to spot missed logs with fancy graphics turned on.
 * Note that with stone or wood axes, this is most of a Minecraft day's work, and it can require more than one axe. If you are not in a safe area you might want to wait out the night atop the trunk, but remember that items despawn after five minutes, so you may want to go down and collect fallen saplings and logs before nightfall.

Trivia

 * Trees will only grow if they are planted on a chunk of the map that is loaded into memory. If you plant saplings and then explore another more distant area of your world for a few days, they will still be saplings when you return.
 * It seems with the addition of different types of lakes above ground, you may have floating trees. This happens since the tree is spawned when the chunk loads first. Then, the lake is spawned afterwards. This leaves the tree floating above the lake.
 * It is possible, but very rare to find a tree in a desert biome, since they can only spawn in basins with exposed dirt, or on a bit of dirt located at the VERY border of the desert and other biome.
 * However, you can trick other players to thinking that a tree can grow in sand by removing a sand block (in a desert biome) and replacing it with a dirt block, placing a sapling on it and using bone meal on the sapling so that the tree will grow and the other sand blocks surrounding it will block the dirt below it. To make it even more realistic, replace dirt block with sand.
 * You can also do this with stone, bricks and other blocks that saplings cannot be planted on. (If it's transparent, remember to replace the dirt block!)
 * If a sapling is surrounded by a 2 block tall tube it guarantees that it will, eventually, grow into a big tree. The tube forces the small tree growth to always fail each attempt. However, this takes far longer to produce a mature tree, due to the low chance that a sapling will try to grow into a big tree.
 * Trees can grow to encase the player in leaves. This may allow them to see through the world.
 * Two regular saplings planted near each other have a chance to grow above their normal height limit of 14. (Example: 16 tall with 57 wood)
 * A tree standing over a lava pool may catch fire from the lava. These fires can be very dangerous, burning down entire forests. Though an effective way to prevent this is to avoid or cut trees that are near lava, or cover the lava, and so on to prevent the forests from burning down.
 * Trees can naturally spawn on stone, sand, and clay. It is unknown if this is a bug.
 * Large jungle trees and dark oak trees have dirt generated under them if they spawn with part over air or leaves.
 * Oak and dark oak trees drop apples on occasion, which is botanically incorrect. Apple trees drop apples. Oak trees drop acorns. There is a real thing called an "oak apple", but it's an inedible gall, caused by a wasp that lays its eggs in oak buds.
 * Jungle trees can sometimes exceed cloud level. (Y-coord 128)
 * Birch trees resemble the most and recognizable birch tree type: the "Betula Papyrifera", or Paper Birch, which is native to northern North America.
 * In Pocket Edition editor, spruce parts are all tagged as Redwood.