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Description. Pinus pungens is a tree of modest size (6–12 metres or 20–39 feet), and has a rounded, irregular shape. The needles are in bundles of two, occasionally three, yellow-green to mid green, fairly stout, and 4–7 centimetres (–3 in) long. The pollen is released early compared to other pines in the area which minimizes hybridization.
The blue spruce (Picea pungens), also commonly known as green spruce, [3] Colorado spruce, or Colorado blue spruce, is a species of spruce tree native to North America in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. [4] It is noted for its blue-green colored needles, and has therefore been used as an ornamental tree in many places ...
Pinus, the pines, is a genus of approximately 111 extant tree and shrub species. The genus is currently split into two subgenera: subgenus Pinus (hard pines), and subgenus Strobus (soft pines). Each of the subgenera have been further divided into sections based on chloroplast DNA sequencing [1] and whole plastid genomic analysis. [2]
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 08:55, 20 April 2014: 2,304 × 2,941 (4.31 MB): MPF: crop foreground to show tree better, rm slight red cast: 11:52, 6 April 2014
Picea glauca, the white spruce, [4] is a species of spruce native to the northern temperate and boreal forests in North America. Picea glauca is native from central Alaska all through the east, across western and southern/central Canada to the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland, and south to Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Upstate New York and Vermont, along with the ...
Pinus serotina. P. subsect. Australes. Michx. Pinus serotina, the pond pine, black bark pine, bay pine, marsh pine, or pocosin pine,[ 2] is a pine tree found along the Southeastern portion of the Atlantic coastal plain of the United States, from southern New Jersey south to Florida and west to southern Alabama. [ 3]
The Pinaceae (/ pɪˈneɪsiːˌiː, - siˌaɪ /), or pine family, are conifer trees or shrubs, including many of the well-known conifers of commercial importance such as cedars, firs, hemlocks, piñons, larches, pines and spruces. The family is included in the order Pinales, formerly known as Coniferales. Pinaceae have distinctive cones with ...
File:Pinus pungens at Ravens Roost, Blue Ridge Parkway, Virginia.jpg cropped 75 % horizontally, 46 % vertically, 86 % areawise using CropTool with lossless mode. File usage The following pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed):