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Encyclopedia > Chihuahua White Pine
Chihuahua White Pine
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Pinales
Family: Pinaceae
Genus: Pinus
Subgenus: Strobus
Species: strobiformis
Binomial name

Pinus strobiformis

The Chihuahua White Pine (Pinus strobiformis; family Pinaceae) is a species of pine tree that occurs in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains of Western Mexico, from a short distance south of the US border south through Chihuahua and Durango to Jalisco. It is typically a high-elevation pine, often growing mixed with several other pine species. In favourable conditions, it makes a tree to 30 m, rarely 40 m tall.


Chihuahua White Pine is a member of the white pine group, Pinus subgenus Strobus, and like all members of that group, the leaves ('needles') are in fascicles (bundles) of five, with a deciduous sheath. The needles are finely serrated, and 8-14 cm long. The cones are very large, 16-50 cm long and 9-11 cm broad, and have scales with a very characteristic prolonged and often recurved or S-shaped apex. The seeds are large, and with a very short wing; they are dispersed mainly by birds, particularly the Mexican Jay.


Chihuahua White Pine has frequently been confused with the Arizona and New Mexico populations of Limber Pine, Pinus flexilis var. reflexa or Pinus reflexa. These latter, often known in English as Southwestern White Pine, are often listed as Pinus strobiformis, but differ from true Pinus strobiformis in having shorter needles, 6-11 cm long, which are only slightly serrated towards the tips of the needles rather than serrated along the full length; and smaller, narrower cones, typically 10-20 cm long and 6-8 cm broad, the cone scales not having a very prolonged apex; the seeds are also slightly smaller. It is possible that Pinus reflexa is a natural hybrid between Pinus flexilis and Pinus strobiformis. Type localities of the taxa are:

Pinus reflexa: Santa Catalina Mountains 40 km east of Tucson, Arizona
Pinus strobiformis: Cusihuir chic, 90 km southwest of Chihuahua City, in the south of Chihuahua State, Mexico

External links

  • Pinus strobiformis cone pics; compare also Pinus reflexa and Pinus flexilis (scroll way down page) (http://www.pinetum.org/cones/PNStrobus.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Pine at AllExperts (1407 words)
Pines are coniferous trees of the genus Pinus, in the family Pinaceae.
Pines are mostly monoecious, having the male and female cones on the same tree, though a few species are sub-dioecious with individuals predominantly, but not wholly, single-sex.
Pines are commercially among the most important of species used for timber in temperate and tropical regions of the world.
The National Arbor Day Foundation (611 words)
The vast eastern white pine forests that met the first settlers soon provided these intrepid men and women lumber for their homes, schools, and churches.
The towering white pines, coveted for the masts of sailing ships, even played a role in the fight for independence, as the colonists united against Britain in part because of the King's claiming of the largest white pines for the Royal Navy.
Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), the tallest tree native to eastern North America, was one of the dominant forest giants that greeted the first English settlers.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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