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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Pinus monticola | Western White Pine
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Pinus monticola | Western White Pine
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Western white pine is a native, evergreen, long-lived (400+ years), monoecious tree [9,11,16,44]. It can reach 200 feet (60 m) in height and 8 feet (2.4 m) in d.b.h. The needles, 2 to 4 inches (5-10 cm) long, are in bundles of five. The bark on young trees is smooth and grayish green but on mature trees becomes grayish brown, scaley, and separated into rectangular plates [16]. The crown is narrow and composed of regularly spaced branches [1]. In dense stands western white pine self-prunes well, leaving a long, clean bole [16]. The root system consists of a taproot and lateral roots which can spread up to 26 feet (8 m). Most (75 percent) of the lateral roots are in the upper 24 inches (60 cm) of soil [11]. The male strobili are yellow, and the female strobili are reddish purple. Mature female strobili are 5 to 15 inches (12-38 cm) in length [44]. The early growth of western white pine is not rapid, but it is the fastest growing sapling and pole-sized tree in the Northern Rockies [8,13]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Western white pine can begin producing strobili at 7 years of age [11], but production can be limited by moisture stress and timing. Moisture stress in the early summer of the year strobili mature leads to abortion, while moisture stress in the early summer of the first and second years prior to strobili emergence causes an increase in the number of strobili. Moisture stress in the late summer prior to strobili emergence causes a decrease in strobili numbers [47]. A good crop of female strobili is about 40 per tree [1]. During fair to poor crop years cone beetles (Conophthorus spp.), cone moths (Dioryctria abietivorella and Eucosma rescissorianna), red squirrels, and deer mice can cause partial or complete crop failures [11]. Seed production requires 3 years from the onset of bud initiation. Good seed crops occur every 3 to 4 years. The mean number of seeds per pound is 27,000 (59,000/kg). The seed can be dispersed by wind up to 2,620 feet (800 m) from the parent tree. Seeds remain viable in the duff for up to 4 years, but the germination rate decreases. After 2 years the rate is 25 percent, and after 4 years the rate is 1 percent. Western white pine's seed requires cold moist stratification of 30 to 120 days to germinate; germination is epigeal [11]. Moisture and soil temperature are believed to control the onset of germination. The perferred germination substrate is mineral soil, but seeds will also germinate in duff [8,11]. Seedling mortality is quite high in the first year due to snow mold (Neopeckia coulteri), rodents, late season drought, and elevated soil temperatures on dry sites [11]. On dry sites seedling establishment is favored by partial shade, while on moist sites full sunlight favors establishment [11,15]. Vegetative reproduction: Western white pine does not naturally reproduce by sprouting or layering. However, cuttings from young trees treated with rooting hormones (indolebutyric acid) have rooted with fair success [11]. Williams [69] describes the process and considerations for rooting cuttings from older trees (25 years). He obtained a mean success rate of 37 percent. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Western white pine is restricted to climates characterized by dry summers and a predominance of winter precipitation [72]. The most extensive and best stands of western white pine are found in the river bottoms and less steep lower slopes of the Priest, Coeur d'Alene, St. Joe, and Clearwater River basins [72]. In British Columbia, western white pine is a minor species on moderately dry to wet, nutrient-medium to nutrient-rich sites in the maritime and submaritime climates [23]. Here, western white pine requires sites fairly rich in calcium and magnesium [25]. However, in the coastal Northwest, western white pine becomes abundant only on poor sites, where it can outcompete Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and other conifers. It does well on unproductive, gravelly soils in the Puget Sound area and reportedly thrives at the edges of bogs on the Olympic Peninsula [1]. Soils: Western white pine grows on a wide variety of soils within its range, the majority of which have been classified as Spodosols [11]. Along the West Coast, it attains best development on deep, porous soils, but it is most common on poor, sandy soils. In northern Idaho and other inland sites, it is found on shallow to deep soils, with the surface layers composed of loess or loessial-like material. Parent materials include granite, shist, basalt, and sedimentary rocks. The pH ranges from 4.5 to 6.8 with a mean of 5.4 [11]. Elevation and topography: Western white pine is generally a montane species, but grows at a wide range of elevations [11,72]. Elevational ranges vary as follows [11]: Area Feet Meters British Columbia 0 to 1,480 0 to 450 Vancover Island, BC 0 to 3,940 0 to 1,200 California 6,000 to 10,990 1,830 to 3350 Idaho 1,540 to 5,910 500 to 1,800 Montana 1,540 to 5,910 500 to 1,800 Oregon 6,000 to 7,020 1,830 to 2140 Washington 0 to 6,070 0 to 1,850 Associated species: In Washington, Oregon, and the Inland Empire, western white pine grows in communities that are rich in other woody and herbaceous flora, but in the Sierra Nevada associated vegetation is usually sparse [11]. In addition to those previously listed under Distribution and Occurrence, overstory associates include Pacific silver fir (Abies anabilis), noble fir (A. concolor), whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis), foxtail pine (P. balfauriana), limber pine (P. flexilis), sugar pine (P. lambertiana), Jeffrey pine (P. jeffreyi), quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides), and paper birch (Betula papyrifera) [11]. Understory associates include Pacific yew (Taxus brevifolia), huckleberry (Vaccinium spp.), willow (Salix spp.), honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.), currant, Rocky Mountain maple (Acer glabrum), snowberry (Symphoricarpus spp.), ocean-spray (Holodiscus discolor), serviceberry (Amelanchier alnifolia), pachistima (Pachistima myrsinites), sedges (Carex spp.), pinegrass (Calamagrostis rubescens), false-solomons-seal (Smilacina), wild ginger (Asarum caudatum), and queencup beadlily [11]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Obligate Initial Community Species Facultative Seral Species Western white pine is classified as shade intolerant to very intolerant [24]. It is usually seral to fir (Abies spp.), spruce (Picea spp.), or hemlock (Tsuga spp.) [5,9]. Stickney [59] classified western white pine as a colonizer. Western white pine does not respond favorably after release from 30 to 60 years of suppression [5,6]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Height and diameter growth starts from May to late June depending on elevation, aspect, and latitude [11]. Strobili buds emerge in June. The buds are differentiated in July and August of the year preceding emergence. Pollen dispersal lasts for a mean of 8.5 days and usually starts the last week in June. Time of flowering varies over a period of 20 days and is strongly controlled by temperatures during the preceding weeks. It is delayed for 5 days for every 1,000 feet (300 m) gain in elevation, and 6 days per degree Fahrenheit below normal temperatures for May and June. The female strobili ripen from August to September of the second year after bud emergence [11]. The mean phenological development dates for western white pine in northern Idaho were as follows [53]: Bark Shoots Buds Pollen Pollen Shoots Winter Cones Cones Slips Open Burst Starts Ends End Buds Full Open Formed Size Apr 28 May 6 May 21 Jun 11 Jun 28 Aug 11 Aug 13 Aug 1 Sep 8

Related categories for Species: Pinus monticola | Western White Pine

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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