Difference between revisions of "Pinus quadrifolia"

Parlatore ex Sudworth

U.S.D.A. Div. Forest. Bull. 14: 17. 1897.

Common names: Parry pinyon piñón
Basionym: Pinus parryana Engelmann
Synonyms: Pinus cembroides var. parryana Voss Pinus juarezensis Lanner
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2.
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|name=Pinus cembroides var. parryana
 
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|name=Pinus juarezensis
 
|name=Pinus juarezensis
 
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|elevation=1200–1800m
 
|elevation=1200–1800m
 
|distribution=Calif.;Mexico in Baja California.
 
|distribution=Calif.;Mexico in Baja California.
|discussion=<p>Pinus quadrifolia is the rarest pinyon in the flora. It hybridizes naturally with P. monophylla.</p>
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|discussion=<p><i>Pinus quadrifolia</i> is the rarest pinyon in the flora. It hybridizes naturally with <i>P. monophylla</i>.</p>
 
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|publication year=1897
 
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|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/9216fc802291cd3df363fd52122300479582ede7/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V2/V2_30.xml
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|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/8f726806613d60c220dc4493de13607dd3150896/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V2/V2_30.xml
 
|genus=Pinus
 
|genus=Pinus
 
|species=Pinus quadrifolia
 
|species=Pinus quadrifolia

Revision as of 15:46, 18 September 2019

Trees to 10m; trunk to 0.5m diam., straight, much branched; crown dense, becoming rounded. Bark red-brown, irregularly furrowed and cross-checked to irregularly rectangular, plates scaly. Branches spreading to ascending, persistent to trunk base; twigs slender, pale orange-brown, puberulent-glandular, aging brown to gray-brown. Buds ovoid, light red-brown, ca. 0.4–0.5cm, slightly resinous. Leaves (3–)4(–5) per fascicle, persisting 3–4 years, (2–)3–6cm × (1–)1.2–1.7mm, curved, connivent, stiff, green to blue-green, margins entire to minutely scaly-denticulate, finely serrulate, apex subulate, adaxial surfaces mostly strongly whitened with stomatal bands, abaxial surface not so but 2 subepidermal resin bands evident; sheath 0.5–0.6cm, scales soon recurved, forming rosette, shed early. Pollen cones ovoid, ca. 10mm, yellowish. Seed cones maturing in 2 years, shedding seeds and falling soon thereafter, spreading, symmetric, ovoid before opening, broadly ovoid to depressed-globose when open, (3–)4–8(–10)cm, pale yellow-brown, sessile to short-stalked, apophyses thickened, strongly raised, diamond-shaped, transversely keeled, umbo subcentral, low-pyramidal or sunken, blunt. Seeds obovoid, body ca. 15mm, brown, wingless.


Habitat: Dry rocky sites
Elevation: 1200–1800m

Distribution

V2 30-distribution-map.gif

Calif., Mexico in Baja California.

Discussion

Pinus quadrifolia is the rarest pinyon in the flora. It hybridizes naturally with P. monophylla.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.