Misplaced Pages

Pine

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MPF (talk | contribs) at 13:10, 22 January 2004. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 13:10, 22 January 2004 by MPF (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


Pinus, pines
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Pinophyta
Class:Pinopsida
Order:Pinales
Family:Pinaceae
Genus:Pinus
Species

Pinus albicaulis
Pinus aristata
Pinus balfouriana
Pinus cembroides
Pinus edulis
Pinus longaeva
Pinus monophylla
Pinus monticola
Pinus quadrifolia
Pinus radiata
Pinus sylvestris

~ 105 more

A pine is a coniferous tree of the genus Pinus, in the Family Pinaceae. There are about 115 species of Pinus, although different authors accept anything between about 105 to 125 species. Pine trees are resinous and evergreen. They have scale leaves that are soon lost and replaced by needles bundled in clusters of (1) 2 to 5 needles each. Pines are monoecious: having male and female cones on the same tree. Female cones take 2-3 years to mature after arrival of the male pollen grain, with actual fertilization delayed one year.

Pines are native to most of North America, ranging from the Arctic to Mexico and Nicaragua and the West Indies. They occur naturally in Eurasia, ranging from Spain and Scotland east to the Russian Far East, Japan, and the Philippines, and south to northernmost Africa, the Himalaya and Southeast Asia, with one species just crossing the Equator in Sumatra. They are also extensively planted in many parts of the Southern hemisphere.

Young pine trees
Commercial planting of young
Longleaf pine trees (
Pinus palustris)
(Enlarge image)

Pines grow well in acid soils, some also on calcareous soils. A few are able to sprout after forest fires. Some species of pines need fire to germinate and their populations suffer under fire suppression regimes. Several species are adapted to extreme conditions imposed by elevation and latitude (see Whitebark pine and Bristlecone pine).

Pines are commercially among the most important of species used for timber in temperate and tropical regions of the world. The seeds are commonly eaten by birds and squirrels, though some birds, notably the Nutcracker, Clark's Nutcracker and Pinyon Jay are of importance in distributing pine seeds to new areas where they can grow. The seeds of some species — called "pine nuts "— are sold commercially for cooking and baking. The resin of some species is important as the source of turpentine.

Pinus radiata and other common pine species are often grown commercially as a source of wood pulp for papermaking. This is because they are fast-growing softwoods that can be planted in relatively dense stands, and because their resinous needles inhibit the growth of other plants (e.g. weeds) in the cropping areas. Pine plantations can be at risk of fire damage because pine resin is flammable to the point of a tree being explosive under some conditions.

List of pines (under construction)

North American pine species:

Many more species occur in Mexico south of the US border

European Pine species:

Many more species occur in Asia.

References

  • Richardson, D. M. (ed.). 1998. Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 530 p. ISBN 0 521 55176 5.
  • Mabberley, D.J. 1987. The Plant Book. A portable dictionary of the higher plants. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 706 p. ISBN 0 521 34060 8.

External links



See also: Pine email client.