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

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Pinus strobiformis | Southwestern White Pine
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Southwestern white pine is a native, evergreen conifer with an open, irregular crown. It can grow to 90 feet (27 m) tall with diameters to 3.2 feet (1 m) [15,53,64]. The bark is thin, rough, and furrowed [15,54]. Branches are long and horizontal to pendant [53]. Needles are 2.4 to 4 inches (6-10 cm) long in fascicles of five [53]. The cones are 2.8 to 9.8 inches (7-25 cm) long with reflexed, thick scales; cones are dehiscent when mature [15,46]. Seeds are essentially wingless and 0.4 to 0.5 inch (10-12 mm) long [15,53]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Southwestern white pine reproduces sexually. It begins to produce cones when pole sized or about 15 years [39,44]. The interval between seed crops for any one tree is 3 to 4 years [44]. Seed traps were placed in clearcut mixed-conifer forest in Arizona to monitor regeneration over 3 years. No southwestern white pine seeds were found in the traps [39]. Southwestern white pine seeds require 2 weeks to 4 months stratification before germinating [43,44,78]. Germinability can vary between 52 and 95 percent [43,44]. Seed collection and germination methods are discussed in detail [36,44]. Seeds of the southwestern white pine ripen synchronously throughout a forest and overwhelm the harvesting efforts of predators [11,34]. Red squirrels clip entire cones and cache them [34]. The wingless seeds are dispersed by birds, primarily by the Steller's jay and Clark's nutcracker [11,47,72]. Animal caches result in clustered stands [72]. Southwestern white pine seedlings root deeply (to about 8 inches [20.3 cm]) the first year, which increases their survival under drought conditions [40,43]. All of the southwestern white pine seedlings died in a greenhouse experiment that assessed the drought resistance of conifers along an elevational gradient. Southwestern white pine died after significantly (p<0.05) fewer days than other conifer species from lower elevations [10]. With the initial deep root growth, southwestern white pine seedlings had the slowest top growth rate of four conifer species measured. At about 6 years of age, the average height of southwestern white pine seedlings was 13.3 inches (33.8 cm) [40]. In another study, 2-year-old seedlings were between 4 and 8 inches (10.2-20.3 cm) tall [36]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Southwestern white pine is widespread in mesic sites on ridges, slopes, and canyons of montane zones [15]. The best growth of this species occurs on moist, cool sites with deep soil [14,53]. The climate is semiarid, characterized by mild winters and warm summers. There are two wet seasons: July to September and December to March [2,10]. Average precipitation ranges from 19.2 to 45 inches (487-1,143 mm) per year [25,27,57]. Southwestern white pine occurs in ravines or on mesic lower slopes at 5,000 feet (1,525 m) in southeastern Arizona and goes up to timberline in southwestern Colorado [52,76]. It is typically found at elevations from 6,000 to 10,000 feet (1,830-3,048 m) [17,52]. Southwestern white pine often occurs on north- to east-facing slopes, but it has been reported on all aspects [1,11,17,57,71]. Southwestern white pine is found on sites with loamy soil textures ranging from shallow, gravelly loams to deep, sandy loams to stoney silty clay loams [23,30,32,40]. Two to nine conifer species occur in the southwestern mixed-conifer forest type. Their proportions vary depending on site characteristics [37,48]. Some associated species not mentioned in Distribution and Occurrence are listed below. Associated tree species are New Mexico locust (Robinia neomexicana), Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii), and silverleaf oak (Quercus hypoleucoides) [14]. Associated shrubs are mountain snowberry (Symphoricarpos oreophilus), bush oceanspray (Holodiscus dumosus), Arizona honeysuckle (Lonicera arizonica), and Fendler ceanothus (Ceanothus fendleri) [8,14,23,57]. Other associated plants are Arizona fescue (Festuca arizonica), screwleaf muhly (Muhlenbergia virescens), pine dropseed (Blepharoneuron tricholepsis), Arizona wheatgrass (Elymus arizonicus), and western yarrow (Achillea lanulosa) [8,23,51]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Facultative Seral Species Southwestern white pine is frequently a persistent, long-lived seral or climax species in mixed-conifer forests [4,26,51]. It has been classified as an early successional major tree [60]. Southwestern white pine infrequently is a climax dominant or codominant in open stands [4,51,69]. Southwestern white pine is relatively shade intolerant compared to other associated conifers in the southwestern mixed-conifer forests. It is relatively resitant to damage from full sunlight [41]. In 8 out of 12 sites in New Mexico, southwestern white pine was in the overstory, but in only 2 of those 12 sites was it in the understory. Ahlstrand [1] suggested that canopy closure prevented southwestern white pine replacement at these sites. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Southwestern white pine flowers in June. Cones mature in September, and seeds are dispersed from September to October [44]. Southwestern white pine seeds germinate either in the spring or in the summer after the rains begin [40].

Related categories for Species: Pinus strobiformis | Southwestern 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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