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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Pinus sabiniana | Gray Pine
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Pinus sabiniana | Gray Pine
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Gray pine wood has minor commercial value. It is used for making railroad ties, box shook, pallet stock, and chips. Poor form, high resin content, and high proportions of compression wood result in low stumpage prices. The mechanical strength properties of the wood have been detailed [49]. Gray pine is expensive to log due to low stand density [40]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : The blue oak-gray pine community is preferred habitat for black-tailed deer, California quail, and mourning dove [9]. Gray pine seeds are an important diet item for various birds and rodents. Scrub jay, acorn woodpecker, and California gray squirrel are major seed consumers [40]. Livestock also eat the seeds. High concentrations of resins and terpines render gray pine browse unpalatable [42]. PALATABILITY : NO-ENTRY NUTRITIONAL VALUE : The percent composition of gray pine seeds is as follows [47]: protein 25.0 fat 49.4 carbohydrate 17.5 Kcal/100 g 571 The concentrations of several essential minerals in gray pine seeds are available [47]. COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Gray pine has been planted on a limited basis for erosion control. Commercial nursery stock is unavailable. Seedlings have been established on rehabilitation sites by planting 1- or 2-year-old bareroot stock grown from locally collected seed [27,29]. Gray pine is an appropriate choice for planting in soils with calcium imbalances. It will grow well on both serpentine soil, where calcium is deficient, and on limestone soil, where calcium is adundant. In addition, it will grow on xeric sites where establishment of other tree species is difficult [40]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Gray pine seeds were important in the diet of California Indians [40]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Gray pine is considered an undesirable weed tree by many rangeland managers. Production and quality of forage growing under gray pine is less than that growing under blue oak. Additionally, gray pine provides little shade for livestock during hot summer months [13,22,40]. It has been extensively cut within the last century in order to clear rangeland areas [40]. Diseases: Prominent diseases of gray pine include western gall rust (Periderium harknessii) and dwarf-mistletoe (Arceuthobium occidentale and A. campylopodum forma campylopodum) [1,20,31,40]. Western gall rust forms galls on gray pine throughout its range but rarely causes serious damage. Dwarf-mistletoe is a particularly damaging and widespread disease [40]. It infects trees of all ages, causing reduced tree vigor or death. Left uncontrolled, infection can increase sixty-fold within 10 years [20]. Arceuthobium occidentale also infects Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziezii) and bigcone Douglas-fir, while A. campylopodum forma campylopodum can infect Coulter, Jeffrey (Pinus jeffreyi), Monterey (P. radiata), and ponderosa pines [20,31]. Dwarf-mistletoe is controlled by cutting infected trees or removing infected branches [31]. Gray pine is the specific host for Ips spinifer. This bark beetle generally attacks fire- or drought-weakened trees. Heavy resin production by healthy trees provides a strong defense against most species of bark beetles. Gray pine is host to a variety of cone, twig, and foliage insects, but the damage they cause is usually minor [40]. Gray pine growing in hardpan is susceptible to windthrow under waterlogged soil conditions [40].

Related categories for Species: Pinus sabiniana | Gray 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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