Pinus radiata (family Pinaceae) is known in English as Monterey Pine in some parts of the world (mainly in the USA, Canada and the British Isles), and Radiata Pine in others (primarily Australia, New Zealand and Chile). It is a species of pine native to coastal California in three very limited areas in Santa Cruz, Monterey and San Luis Obispo Counties, and (as the variety Pinus radiata var. binata) on Guadalupe Island and Cedros Island off the west coast of Baja California, Mexico. It is also extensively cultivated in many other warm temperate parts of the world.
P. radiata grows to between 15-30 m in height in the wild, but up to 60 m in cultivation in optimum conditions, with upward pointing branches and a rounded top. The leaves ('needles') are bright green, in clusters of three (two in var. binata), slender, 8-15 cm long and with a blunt tip. The cones are 7-17 cm long, brown, ovoid (egg-shaped), and usually set asymmetrically on a branch, attached at an oblique angle. The bark is fissured and dark grey to brown.
It is closely related to Bishop Pine and Knobcone Pine, hybridizing readily with both species; it is distinguished from the former by needles in threes (not pairs), and from both by the cones not having a sharp spine on the scales.
In the wild, Monterey Pine in California is seriously threatened by an introduced fungal disease, Pine Pitch Canker, caused by Fusarium circinatum, while var. binata on Guadalupe Island is critically endangered (less than 100 surviving trees) by uncontrolled grazing by goats released long ago on this uninhabited island.
The forests associated with Monterey Pine are associated with other flora and fauna of note. In particular, the pine forest in Monterey, California was the discovery site for Hickman's potentilla, an endangered wildflower. Nearby in a remnant pine forest of Pacific Grove, is a prime breeding habitat of the Monarch butterfly.
In areas such as New Zealand this tree has become naturalized, and is considered a weed in the native forest habitat where it has escaped from plantations.
Pinaceae | Trees of California
Monterey-Kiefer | Pin de Monterey | Montereyden | Sosna kalifornijska | Monteri çamı
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"Monterey Pine".
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