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Mexico and adjacent USA

Pinus sp. (Pine)

View toward Entrance Station and Puu Nianiau with Forest retrieving bat detector at Hosmers Haleakala National Park, Maui, Hawaii.

October 28, 2018

#181028-5777 - Image Use Policy

 

In the pine barrens, New Jersey

5-needle pine. Photograph provided by Susan J. Meades

This Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda) is growing on the sandy beach on the bay side of Assateague Island. The bay is salt water which pine trees do not tolorate. It is hard for me to believe that the fresh water lens on the island extends this far under the beach sand. I think this tree is being sustained by the large horizontal (above ground) root that provides fresh water by connecting it to the higher ground inland. The root is easily seen in the photograph. Anyway this is one tough tree and stands out as a survivor. Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland

Pine (Pinus, family Pinaceae) reproduction takes two years. At the beginning of year one (shown here), ovulate cones are pollinated, but the female gametophtyes in the cones are not yet mature. The pollen remains in the cone until the beginning of year two, when fertilization occurs, and seeds begin to develop. This specimen of a cultivated European species was photographed May 18, 2007 in Marion County, Ohio, USA.

called "Daioushou" in japanese.

Pinus strobus, commonly known as the eastern white pine, white pine, northern white pine, Weymouth pine, and soft pine is a large pine native to eastern North America. In german : Weymouth-Kiefer

Found + shot at the Botanical Park of Villa Taranto, Verbania, Lake Maggiore, Italy

Species from Western North America

 

Common name: Colorado Pinyon, Two-needle Pinyon, Piñon Pine

 

Showing nascent male cones

 

Photographed in the Walnut Canyon National Monument, Coconino County, Arizona

Species from Western North America

 

Common name: Colorado Pinyon, Two-needle Pinyon, Piñon Pine

 

Showing nascent male cones

 

Photographed in the Walnut Canyon National Monument, Coconino County, Arizona

Pinus halepensis is commonly known as the Aleppo pine and it is native to the Mediterranean region.

Pinus aristata, upper Long Canyon Trail, Sangre de Christo Range, Taos Co., NM, 13 Jul 1989.

Species from New Jersey south to the Florida panhandle and west to eastern Texas and Oklahoma

 

Common name: Shortleaf Pine

 

Photographed in the Arkansas State Arboretum, Pinnacle Mountain State Park, Pulaski County, Arkansas

Close examination reveals parallel venation of Japanese Black Pine Needles

Nikko Botanical Garden, Nikko City, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan

Pinus longaeva, along White Mountain Road S of Schulman Grove, White Mountains, Inyo Co., CA, 14 Jul 2015.

Buena vista con el aspecto característico de las ramas de este pino.

He comprobado la presencia de las 3 especies (sylvestris, nigra y pinaster) en esta zona. Predomina el sylvestris, pero no son raros los ejemplares (agrupados o sueltos) de las otras especies.

Lodgepole Pine, Donner Pass, CA, about 6,000 ft, two short, twisted needles

Eastern white pine

Montezuma pine (Pinus montezumae), late October. A large conifer native to Mexico and Central America, where it is known as ocote.

Pinus contorta (lodgepole pine)

Dupont, Sevier County, Tennessee

Pinus leucodermis 'Schmidtii' (Bosnian Redcone Pine, or Smidtii Dwarf Bosnian Pine). A dense, mounded dwarf pine with rich green foliage and tight branch structure. Discovered in 1926 by Eugene Smidt in Bosnia.

Coming back home, lots of pinus that are going to be transformed in paper.This photo was takes while my husband was driving :)

Wakehurst Place, Sussex

January 2009

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