Cupressus goveniana |
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Gowen cypress, Mendocino cypress, Santa Cruz cypress |
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Habit | Shrubs or small trees usually to 10 m, but to 50 m under favorable conditions, or bearing cones at as little as 2 dm on shallow hardpan soils; crown globose to columnar, dense or sparse. |
Bark | smooth or rough, fibrous. |
Branchlets | decussate, 1–1.5 mm diam. |
Leaves | without abaxial gland or sometimes with embedded abaxial gland that does not produce drop of resin, not glaucous. |
Pollen cones | 3–4 × 1.5–2 mm; pollen sacs 3–6. |
Seed(s) | cones globose, 1–2.5(–3) cm, grayish brown, not glaucous; scales 3–5 pairs, smooth, umbo nearly flat at maturity. |
Cupressus goveniana |
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Habitat | Coastal closed-cone pine forests, especially on sterile soils |
Elevation | 60–800 m (200–2600 ft) |
Distribution |
CA
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Discussion | Populations from the three regions of Cupressus goveniana —north coast, Santa Cruz Mountains, and Monterey Peninsula—differ in foliage and seed characters and have been treated as varieties or species; additional interpopulational variation occurs within these regions. Trees from Santa Cruz Mountain populations may have originated through hybidization with C. sargentii (E. Zavarin et al. 1971). The pygmy forests of this species and Pinus contorta Douglas ex Loudon on the shallow hardpan soils of coastal terraces of the Mendocino white plains are a remarkable example of phenotypic plasticity. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 2. |
Parent taxa | Cupressaceae > Cupressus |
Sibling taxa | |
Synonyms | C. abramsiana, C. goveniana var. abramsiana, C. goveniana var. pigmaea, C. pigmaea |
Name authority | Gordon: J. Hort. Soc. London 4: 295. (1849) |
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