1Up Info - A Portal with a Difference

1Up Travel - A Travel Portal with a Difference.    
1Up Info
   

Earth & EnvironmentHistoryLiterature & ArtsHealth & MedicinePeoplePlacesPlants & Animals  • Philosophy & Religion  • Science & TechnologySocial Science & LawSports & Everyday Life Wildlife, Animals, & PlantsCountry Study Encyclopedia A -Z
North America Gazetteer


You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Taxodium distichum | Baldcypress
 

Wildlife, Animals, and Plants

 


Wildlife, Animals, and Plants

 

Wildlife Species

  Amphibians

  Birds

  Mammals

  Reptiles

 

Kuchler

 

Plants

  Bryophyte

  Cactus

  Fern or Fern Ally

  Forb

  Graminoid

  Lichen

  Shrub

  Tree

  Vine


VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Taxodium distichum | Baldcypress
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Baldcypress wood is highly resistant to decay, making it valuable for a multitude of uses [8]. It is used in building construction, fence posts, planking in boats, doors, blinds, flooring, shingles, caskets, interior trim, and cabinetry [11,46,51]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Baldcypress seeds are eaten by wild turkey, wood ducks, evening grosbeak, and squirrels. The seed is a minor part of the diet of waterfowl and wading birds. Yellow-throated warblers forage in the Spanish moss often found hanging on the branches of old cypress trees [4,48,53]. Cypress domes provide watering places for a variety of birds, mammals, and reptiles of the surrounding pinelands [31]. PALATABILITY : NO-ENTRY NUTRITIONAL VALUE : NO-ENTRY COVER VALUE : The tops of cypress trees provide nesting sites for bald eagles and ospreys. Warblers use the old decaying knees for nesting cavities, and catfish spawn below cypress logs. Cypress domes provide breeding sites for a number of frogs, toads, and salamanders. Cypress domes also provide nesting sites for herons and egrets [22,30]. VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Baldcypress has been successfully planted on the margins of surface- mined lakes in southern Illinois, southwestern Indiana, and western Kentucky [9]. Cypress swamps help to maintain high regional water tables, and they can also be used to provide advanced wastewater treatment for small communities [21]. Research has shown that cypress domes can serve as tertiary sewage treatment facilities for improving water quality and recharging groundwater [25]. Methods of collecting, extracting, cleaning, storing, and sowing baldcypress seeds to produce nursery-grown seedlings have been described [48,53]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Baldcypress has been planted as a water tolerant tree species used for shading and canopy closure to help reduce populations of the Anopheles mosquito [5]. Baldcypress has been successfully planted throughout its range as an ornamental and along roadsides [11]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Silviculture: Canopy thinning has been reported as the best management practice for regenerating cypress. Thinning controls competition and allows overhead light for newly germinated seedlings [20,53]. Animal damage: The swamp rodent nutria often clips or uproots newly planted cypress seedlings before the root systems are fully established, thus killing the seedlings. When nutria populations are high, entire plantings are often destroyed in a few days [43]. Insects and disease: The fungus Stereum taxodi causes brown pocket rot known as "pecky cypress" that attacks the heartwood of older living baldcypress trees. The fungus most often gains entrance in the crown and works its way down, destroying a considerable part of the heartwood at the base of the tree [53]. The forest tent caterpillar (Malacosma disstria) and fruit-tree leafroller (Archips argyrospila) larvae webb and feed on cypress needles as soon as the buds break and small leaflets expand, causing dieback and sometimes mortality [27,53].

Related categories for Species: Taxodium distichum | Baldcypress

Send this page to a friend
Print this Page

Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities.

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

About Us | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy | Links Directory
Link to 1Up Info | Add 1Up Info Search to your site

1Up Info All Rights reserved. Site best viewed in 800 x 600 resolution.