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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Cupressus bakeri | Baker Cypress
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Cupressus bakeri | Baker Cypress
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Baker cypress is a native, evergreen tree with a single stem and narrow crown [12]. It grows from 33 to 99 feet (10-30 m) tall [10,31]. Juvenile leaves are from 0.08 to 0.4 inches (2-10 mm) long and may be produced on seedlings for several years. They gradually give way to mature leaves, which are 0.08 inches (2 mm) long. Ovulate cones occur in clusters of 15 to 30 and are 0.8 to 1.6 inches (20-40 mm) in diameter [1]. Staminate cones are 0.08 to 0.12 inches (3-4 mm) long [10]. The bark of Baker cypress is partially exfoliating on the main trunk [10,31]. A well-defined taproot and numerous lateral roots are formed the first year [12]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Baker cypress reproduces exclusively from seed. Cone production is abundant. Staminate cones are produced on trees that are 6 to 7 years old [31]. Ovulate cones are produced on trees that are 14 years of age or older and require 2 years to mature [1]. They contain from 50 to 100 seeds per cone [1,31]. The cones are closed; they persist on the tree until opened by the heat of a fire or desiccation due to age [12,29]. Seeds are shed gradually over several months after the cones are opened by heat [29]. Detached cones will open, but they rarely result in seedling establishment, usually due to the lack of a suitable seedbed [1]. Seed dispersal is primarily by wind and rain [29]. Baker cypress requires bare mineral soil for germination and seedling establishment. Seedlings of Baker cypress have been found in areas that do not show signs of recent fire, but the seedlings area usually in the immediate vicinity of fallen cypress trees and along skid roads [27]. Seedling mortality is greater in shaded situations with abundant litter because of damping-off [1,29]. Seedlings are sensitive to excessive moisture [31]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Baker cypress is restricted to well-drained soils [1]. It occurs as disjunct stands and isolated groves in the Sierra Nevada, the Cascade Ranges, and the Siskiyou Mountains [21,29]. In the Siskiyou Mountains Baker cypress occurs on serpentine soils; in the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range it occurs on basic volcanic rock. Soil profiles are almost absent. On gentle slopes trees can be found on deeper soil profiles; where Baker cypress is associated with red fir, a good humic layer of dark brown soil exists [5]. Baker cypress is generally found at elevations from 3,795 to 7,042 feet (1,150-2,134 m) on north- to northeast-facing slopes [5,29]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Facultative Seral Species Cypress seedlings are shade intolerant and survive best in full sunlight on bare mineral soil [29]. In the Mud Lake-Wheeler Peak area of Plumas County, Baker cypress is being replaced by red and white (Abies concolor) firs. Hundreds of saplings and pole-sized trees have died with no indication of insects or disease. Competition of crowns for light, shading of the ground, and accumulation of thick, black duff characteristic of dense true fir stands have created an unfavorable environment for the establishment and survival of Baker cypress [30]. According to Armstrong [1], cypresses of southern California are very sensitive to lack of light, losing their foliage when growing in shade. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Cypress (Cupressus spp.) shed pollen in late fall, winter, and spring. Seeds mature 15 to 18 months after pollination. Ovulate cones ripen the second season after pollination, but remain closed until opened by heat or age [12,31].

Related categories for Species: Cupressus bakeri | Baker Cypress

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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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