Pinus torreyana |
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Del Mar pine, island Torrey pine, soledad pine, Torrey pine |
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Habit | Trees to 15(–23)m; trunk to 1m diam., in nature mostly crooked and leaning; crown rounded to flattened or irregular. | ||||
Bark | red-brown to purple-red, deeply furrowed with irregular, elongate, flat, scaly ridges. |
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Branches | irregular, spreading-ascending, candelabralike; twigs stout (1–2cm thick), greenish, aging deep gray-brown to near black, rough. |
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Buds | conic-ovoid, pale brown, to 2.5cm; scale margins white-fringed. |
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Leaves | mostly 5 per fascicle, ascending or spreading, persisting 3–4 years, 15–30cm × ca. 2mm, straight or curved, slightly twisted, dull gray-green, all surfaces with fine stomatal lines, margins serrulate, apex abruptly acute; sheath to 2cm, shed early, base persistent. |
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Pollen cones | ovoid, 20–30mm, yellow. |
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Seed(s) | cones maturing in 3 years, shedding seeds soon thereafter, persisting to 5 years, lateral, massive, heavy, symmetric, ovoid before opening, broadly ovoid when open, 10–15cm, yellow- to red-brown, lustrous, stalks to 4cm; apophyses thick, angulately dome-shaped, with 5 low convergent keels; umbo central, forming short, curved-tipped pyramid. |
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Pinus torreyana |
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Distribution |
CA; only in the flora
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Discussion | Pinus torreyana is a rare and local Tertiary relic species whose present range is reduced to two small areas of southern California: near Del Mar (San Diego County) and on the northeastern shore of Santa Rosa Island (Santa Barbara County). Its distribution in Oligocene and Miocene (or at least that of its near ancestor) extended north to Oregon. Its harsh natural habitat elicits an unusually contorted and often sparse form, quite unlike the cleaner and taller form the species takes in cultivation. In terms of numbers of individuals in the wild, as well as the small area occupied by natural populations, Pinus torreyana is without a doubt the rarest North American pine. As such it is under protection. Artificial crosses between it and another, more widespread Tertiary relic, P. sabiniana, have been successful. Subspecies 2. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 2. | ||||
Parent taxa | Pinaceae > Pinus | ||||
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Name authority | Parry ex Carrière | ||||
Web links |