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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Pinus pungens | Table Mountain Pine
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Pinus pungens | Table Mountain Pine
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Table Mountain pine is considered fire resistant [13]. Intermediate bark thickness gives mature trees a low to moderate fire tolerance, but populations survive as seeds after severe fires. The delayed seed release from serotinous cones results in prolific reproduction following a fire. Seedlings can survive low-intensity fires because the basal stem crook protects buds from fire [11,13,22]. Table Mountain pine has a pyrogenic strategy. Dense stands with high fuel loads in the crowns foster severe fires that expose the mineral soil needed for germination, eliminate competing vegetation, and release seeds from serotinous cones. The common even-aged stand structure of Table Mountain pine is the result of fire. [5,7,11,22]. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : crown-stored residual colonizer; long-viability seed in on-site cones crown-stored residual colonizer; short-viability seed in on-site cones off-site colonizer; seed carried by wind; postfire years 1 and 2

Related categories for Species: Pinus pungens | Table Mountain 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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