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Pinus albicaulis

Pinus albicaulis, known by the common names whitebark pine, white bark pine, white pine, pitch pine, scrub pine, and creeping pine,[3] is a conifer tree native to the mountains of the western United States and Canada, specifically subalpine areas of the Sierra Nevada, Cascade Range, Pacific Coast Ranges, and Rocky Mountains. It shares the common name "creeping pine" with several other plants.

Whitebark pine
A stand of whitebark pines at Crater Lake National Park in Oregon
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnospermae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Pinales
Family: Pinaceae
Genus: Pinus
Subgenus: P. subg. Strobus
Section: P. sect. Quinquefoliae
Subsection: P. subsect. Strobus
Species:
P. albicaulis
Binomial name
Pinus albicaulis
Natural range of Pinus albicaulis
Synonyms[2]
  • Apinus albicaulis (Engelm.) Rydb.
  • Pinus cembroides Newb. 1857 not Zucc. 1832
  • Pinus flexilis var. albicaulis (Engelm.) Engelm.
  • Pinus flexilis subsp. albicaulis (Engelm.) Engelm.
  • Pinus shasta Carrière
Pinus albicaulis is the only type of tree on the summit of Pywiack Dome in Yosemite National Park

The whitebark pine is typically the highest-elevation pine tree found in these mountain ranges and often marks the tree line. Thus, it is often found as krummholz, trees growing close to the ground that have been dwarfed by exposure. In more favorable conditions, the trees may grow to 29 meters (95 ft) in height.

Identification edit

 
Pinus albicaulis leaves are in fascicles (bundles) of five, and the cone is dark purple when immature (Mount Rainier National Park)

Whitebark pine is a member of the white pine group, the Pinus subgenus Strobus, and the section Strobus; like all members of this group, the leaves (needles) are in fascicles (bundles) of five[4] with a deciduous sheath. This distinguishes whitebark pine and its relatives from the lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta), with two needles per fascicle, as well as the ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) and Jeffrey pine (Pinus jeffreyi), which both have three needles per fascicle; all three of these species also have a persistent sheath at the base of each fascicle. Whitebark pine owes its name to the light gray bark of its young specimens.[4]

Distinguishing whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis), from the related limber pine (Pinus flexilis), also a member of the white pine group, is much more difficult, and usually requires seed or pollen cones. In Pinus albicaulis, the seed-bearing female cones are 4–7 centimeters (1+12–3 in) long, dark purple when immature,[4] and do not open on drying, but the scales easily break when they are removed by the Clark's nutcracker to harvest the seeds; rarely are there intact old cones in the litter beneath the trees. Its pollen cones are scarlet.[5]

In Pinus flexilis, the cones are 6–12 cm (2+124+12 in) long, green when immature, and open to release the seeds; the scales are not fragile. Their pollen cones are yellow, and there are usually intact old cones found beneath them.

Whitebark pine can also be hard to distinguish from the western white pine (Pinus monticola) in the absence of cones. However, whitebark pine needles are yellow-green[4] and entire (smooth when rubbed gently in either direction), whereas western white pine needles are silvery green[4] and finely serrated (feeling rough when rubbed gently from tip to base). Whitebark pine needles are also usually shorter, 3–7 cm (1–3 in) long,[4] though still overlapping in size with the larger 5–10 cm (2–4 in) needles of the western white pine.

Distribution edit

Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) can be found at high elevation in the Rocky Mountains from central British Columbia to western Wyoming.[4] It occurs in the timberline zone of the Cascades and coastal ranges from British Columbia to the Sierra Nevada, as well as most high ranges between the Rockies and Cascades, such as the Blue Mountains.[4] It is also populous in subalpine forests of Montana and Idaho.[4]

Ecology edit

 
The whitebark pine, Pinus albicaulis, at Mount Rainier National Park

The whitebark pine is an important source of food for many granivorous birds and small mammals, including most importantly the Clark's nutcracker (Nucifraga columbiana), the major seed disperser of the pine.[4] Clark's nutcrackers each cache about 30,000 to 100,000 seeds each year in small, widely scattered caches, usually under 2 to 3 cm (34 to 1+14 in) of soil or gravelly substrate. Nutcrackers retrieve these seed caches during times of food scarcity and to feed their young. Cache sites selected by nutcrackers are often favorable for germination of seeds and survival of seedlings. Those caches not retrieved by the time the snow melts contribute to forest regeneration. Consequently, whitebark pine often grows in clumps of several trees, originating from a single cache of two to 15 or more seeds.

Other animals also depend upon the whitebark pine. Douglas squirrels cut down and store whitebark pine cones in their middens. Grizzly bears and American black bears often raid squirrel middens for whitebark pine seeds,[4] an important pre-hibernation food. Squirrels, northern flickers, and mountain bluebirds often nest in whitebark pines, and elk and blue grouse[4] use whitebark pine communities as summer habitat.

Fallen needles under these trees serve as beds that are used by deer and wild sheep seeking shelter during stormy weather.[6]

Threats edit

The whitebark pine has been classified as endangered by the IUCN.[1] Severe population decline in whitebark pine communities is attributed to various causes, most significantly infection with white pine blister rust, recent outbreaks of mountain pine beetles (2000–2014), disturbances in wildland fire ecology (including fire suppression), forest succession, and climate change. A study in the mid-2000s showed that whitebark pine had declined by 41 percent in the western Cascades due to two primary threats: blister rust and pine beetles.[7] Whitebark deaths in North Cascades National Park doubled from 2006 to 2011.[7]

White pine blister rust edit

Many stands of Pinus albicaulis across the species' entire natural range are infected with white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola), a fungal disease introduced from Europe. In the northern Rocky Mountains of the United States, whitebark pine mortality in some areas exceeds 90 percent, where the disease infests nearly 143,000 acres (580 km2). Cronartium ribicola occurs in whitebark pine to the northern limits of the species in the coastal ranges of British Columbia and the Canadian Rocky Mountains. The blister rust has also devastated the commercially valuable western white pine in these areas and made serious inroads in limber pine (Pinus flexilis) populations as well. Nearly 80 percent of whitebark pines in Mount Rainier National Park are infected with blister rust.[7]

There is currently no effective method for controlling the spread and effects of blister rust. However, a small number of trees (fewer than 5%) in most populations harbor genetic resistance to blister rust.[4] Restoration efforts undertaken by the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and National Park Service in the northern Rocky Mountains involve harvesting cones from potentially and known resistant whitebark pines, growing seedlings, and outplanting seedlings in suitable sites. In California, where the blister rust is far less severe, whitebark pine is still fairly common in the High Sierras.[8]

Mountain pine beetle edit

Unusually large outbreaks of mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae), a species of bark beetle native to western North America, have also contributed significantly to the widespread destruction of whitebark pine stands.[9] The beetles both lay their eggs and introduce pathogenic fungi into their host trees, which include many other species of pine, and the combination of larval feeding and fungal colonization is typically sufficient to kill old or unhealthy trees. However, the beetles have recently expanded their attacks to younger, healthier trees as well as older trees, and climate change has been implicated as the primary culprit. Since 2000, the climate at high elevations has warmed enough for the beetles to reproduce within whitebark pine, often completing their life cycle within one year and enabling their populations to grow exponentially. Entire forest vistas, like that at Avalanche Ridge near Yellowstone National Park’s east gate, have become expanses of dead gray whitebarks.[10] Scientists have attributed the recent warming trend to anthropogenic global warming.[7][11]

In 2007, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimated that beetles had killed whitebark pines across 500,000 acres (200,000 ha) in the West, while in 2009, beetles were estimated to have killed trees on 800,000 acres (320,000 ha), the most since record-keeping began.[7] The pine beetle upsurge has killed nearly 750,000 whitebark pines in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem alone.[as of?]

Fire suppression edit

Fire suppression has led to slow population declines over the last century by altering the health and composition dynamics of stands without the fire ecology balancing their habitat and suppressing insect-disease threats.[12] In the absence of low-level wildfire cycles, whitebark pines in these stands are replaced by more shade-tolerant, fire-intolerant species such as subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) and Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii). In addition, senescent and blister rust-infected pine trees are not destroyed by natural periodic ground fires, further diminishing the whitebark pine forest's vitality and survival.[13]

Protective efforts edit

In 2012 the Canadian federal government declared whitebark pine endangered in accordance with the Species at Risk Act. Accordingly, it became the first federally listed endangered tree in western Canada.[14] In 2022 the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service also acted. It listed whitebark pine in the lowest category of vulnerability: "threatened." Four distinct threats were described, beginning with white pine blister rust as "the primary stressor." Mountain pine beetle, altered fire regimes, and "the effects of climate change" add to the challenges.[15] This listing marks the first occasion in which a tree regarded as ecologically important over a vast range in the United States is acknowledged as vulnerable to extinction.[16]

In response to the ongoing decline of the tree throughout its range, the Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation was formed. Their mission is to raise awareness and promote conservation by sponsoring restoration projects, publishing a newsletter called "Nutcracker Notes", and hosting an annual science and management workshop for anyone interested in whitebark pine.[17] This U.S. group collaborates closely with the Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation of Canada.[18]

Uses edit

 
Whitebark pine seeds

Many Native Americans, including the Salish peoples, have been known to eat the seeds from the cones of this tree.[19][4] They were roasted, made into porridge, and mixed with dry berries.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mahalovich, M.; Stritch, L. (2013). "Pinus albicaulis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2013: e.T39049A2885918. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-1.RLTS.T39049A2885918.en. Retrieved November 19, 2021.
  2. ^ "Pinus albicaulis". World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew – via The Plant List. Note that this website has been superseded by World Flora Online
  3. ^ Earle, Christopher J., ed. (2018). "Pinus albicaulis". The Gymnosperm Database.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Arno, Stephen F.; Hammerly, Ramona P. (2020) [1977]. Northwest Trees: Identifying & Understanding the Region's Native Trees (field guide ed.). Seattle: Mountaineers Books. pp. 26, 35–43. ISBN 978-1-68051-329-5. OCLC 1141235469.
  5. ^ Roady, Laura (2010). "Whitebark Pine". Montana Outdoors. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  6. ^ Peattie, Donald Culross (1953). A Natural History of Western Trees. New York: Bonanza Books. p. 33.
  7. ^ a b c d e Welch, Craig (November 6, 2011). "Climate change, beetle may doom rugged pine". Seattle Times. Retrieved September 9, 2022.
  8. ^ Brown, Matthew (December 14, 2022). "Whitebark pine that feeds grizzlies is threatened, US says". AP News. Retrieved December 14, 2022.
  9. ^ Kershner, Bruce; et al. (2008). National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Trees of North America. New York: Sterling. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4027-3875-3.
  10. ^ Petit, Charles (January 30, 2007). . New York Times. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  11. ^ Ross Reynolds (June 9, 2015). "Can A Dying Tree Species Be Saved At Crater Lake?". KUOW.
  12. ^ Kendall, K.C; Keane, R.E. (2001). "Whitebark pine decline: Infection, mortality, and population trends". In Tomback, D.F.; Arno, S.F.; Keane, R.E. (eds.). Whitebark pine communities: ecology and restoration. Washington, D.C.: Island Press. pp. 221–242.
  13. ^ Lorenz, T. J.; Aubry, C.; Shoal, R. (2008). A review of the literature on seed fate in whitebark pine and the life history traits of Clark's nutcracker and pine squirrels (PDF). Portland, OR: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. OCLC 222226528.
  14. ^ Zimmer, Carl (January 13, 2023). "For Trees Under Threat, Flight May Be Best Response". The New York Times. New York Times.
  15. ^ U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (December 15, 2022). "Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Threatened Species Status With Section 4(d) Rule for Whitebark Pine (Pinus albicaulis)" (PDF). Federal Register. 87 (240): 76882–76917.
  16. ^ Center for Biological Diversity. "Whitebark Pine Protected as Threatened Under Endangered Species Act". Retrieved January 13, 2023.
  17. ^ Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation
  18. ^ Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation of Canada
  19. ^ Whitney, Stephen (1985). Western Forests (The Audubon Society Nature Guides). New York: Knopf. p. 408. ISBN 0-394-73127-1.

Further reading edit

  • Chase, J. Smeaton (1911). "Pinus albicaulis (White-bark-pine, White-pine, Dwarf-pine, Alpine white-pine)". Cone-bearing Trees of the California Mountains. Eytel, Carl (illustrations). Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co. pp. 52–54. LCCN 11004975. OCLC 3477527.
  • Keane, Robert E.; Tomback, Diana F.; Murray, Michael P.; et al., eds. (2010). The future of high-elevation, five-needle white pines in Western North America: Proceedings of the High Five Symposium 28–30 June 2010. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. Proceedings RMRS-P-63.
  • Lanner, R. M. (1996). Made for each other: a symbiosis of birds and pines. OUP. ISBN 0-19-508903-0.
  • Logan, J.A.; Regniere, J.; Powell, J.A. (2003). "Assessing the Impacts of Global Warming on Forest Pest Dynamics". Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 1 (3): 130–137. doi:10.1890/1540-9295(2003)001[0130:ATIOGW]2.0.CO;2.
  • Murray, M.P. (2005). "Our Threatened Timberlines: The Plight of Whitebark Pine Ecosystems" (PDF). Kalmiopsis. 12: 25–29.
  • Schwandt, J. (2006). Whitebark pine in peril: A case for restoration. USDA, Forest Service, Northern Region. R1-06-28.
  • Tomback, D.F.; Arno, S.F.; Keane, R.E., eds. (2001). Whitebark pine communities: ecology and restoration. Washington, D.C.: Island Press.

External links edit

pinus, albicaulis, confused, with, pinus, bungeana, also, called, white, barked, pine, known, common, names, whitebark, pine, white, bark, pine, white, pine, pitch, pine, scrub, pine, creeping, pine, conifer, tree, native, mountains, western, united, states, c. Not to be confused with Pinus bungeana also called white barked pine Pinus albicaulis known by the common names whitebark pine white bark pine white pine pitch pine scrub pine and creeping pine 3 is a conifer tree native to the mountains of the western United States and Canada specifically subalpine areas of the Sierra Nevada Cascade Range Pacific Coast Ranges and Rocky Mountains It shares the common name creeping pine with several other plants Whitebark pine A stand of whitebark pines at Crater Lake National Park in Oregon Conservation status Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Gymnospermae Division Pinophyta Class Pinopsida Order Pinales Family Pinaceae Genus Pinus Subgenus P subg Strobus Section P sect Quinquefoliae Subsection P subsect Strobus Species P albicaulis Binomial name Pinus albicaulisEngelm Natural range of Pinus albicaulis Synonyms 2 Apinus albicaulis Engelm Rydb Pinus cembroides Newb 1857 not Zucc 1832 Pinus flexilis var albicaulis Engelm Engelm Pinus flexilis subsp albicaulis Engelm Engelm Pinus shasta Carriere Pinus albicaulis is the only type of tree on the summit of Pywiack Dome in Yosemite National Park The whitebark pine is typically the highest elevation pine tree found in these mountain ranges and often marks the tree line Thus it is often found as krummholz trees growing close to the ground that have been dwarfed by exposure In more favorable conditions the trees may grow to 29 meters 95 ft in height Contents 1 Identification 2 Distribution 3 Ecology 3 1 Threats 3 1 1 White pine blister rust 3 1 2 Mountain pine beetle 3 1 3 Fire suppression 3 2 Protective efforts 4 Uses 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksIdentification edit nbsp Pinus albicaulis leaves are in fascicles bundles of five and the cone is dark purple when immature Mount Rainier National Park Whitebark pine is a member of the white pine group the Pinus subgenus Strobus and the section Strobus like all members of this group the leaves needles are in fascicles bundles of five 4 with a deciduous sheath This distinguishes whitebark pine and its relatives from the lodgepole pine Pinus contorta with two needles per fascicle as well as the ponderosa pine Pinus ponderosa and Jeffrey pine Pinus jeffreyi which both have three needles per fascicle all three of these species also have a persistent sheath at the base of each fascicle Whitebark pine owes its name to the light gray bark of its young specimens 4 Distinguishing whitebark pine Pinus albicaulis from the related limber pine Pinus flexilis also a member of the white pine group is much more difficult and usually requires seed or pollen cones In Pinus albicaulis the seed bearing female cones are 4 7 centimeters 1 1 2 3 in long dark purple when immature 4 and do not open on drying but the scales easily break when they are removed by the Clark s nutcracker to harvest the seeds rarely are there intact old cones in the litter beneath the trees Its pollen cones are scarlet 5 In Pinus flexilis the cones are 6 12 cm 2 1 2 4 1 2 in long green when immature and open to release the seeds the scales are not fragile Their pollen cones are yellow and there are usually intact old cones found beneath them Whitebark pine can also be hard to distinguish from the western white pine Pinus monticola in the absence of cones However whitebark pine needles are yellow green 4 and entire smooth when rubbed gently in either direction whereas western white pine needles are silvery green 4 and finely serrated feeling rough when rubbed gently from tip to base Whitebark pine needles are also usually shorter 3 7 cm 1 3 in long 4 though still overlapping in size with the larger 5 10 cm 2 4 in needles of the western white pine Distribution editWhitebark pine Pinus albicaulis can be found at high elevation in the Rocky Mountains from central British Columbia to western Wyoming 4 It occurs in the timberline zone of the Cascades and coastal ranges from British Columbia to the Sierra Nevada as well as most high ranges between the Rockies and Cascades such as the Blue Mountains 4 It is also populous in subalpine forests of Montana and Idaho 4 Ecology edit nbsp The whitebark pine Pinus albicaulis at Mount Rainier National Park The whitebark pine is an important source of food for many granivorous birds and small mammals including most importantly the Clark s nutcracker Nucifraga columbiana the major seed disperser of the pine 4 Clark s nutcrackers each cache about 30 000 to 100 000 seeds each year in small widely scattered caches usually under 2 to 3 cm 3 4 to 1 1 4 in of soil or gravelly substrate Nutcrackers retrieve these seed caches during times of food scarcity and to feed their young Cache sites selected by nutcrackers are often favorable for germination of seeds and survival of seedlings Those caches not retrieved by the time the snow melts contribute to forest regeneration Consequently whitebark pine often grows in clumps of several trees originating from a single cache of two to 15 or more seeds Other animals also depend upon the whitebark pine Douglas squirrels cut down and store whitebark pine cones in their middens Grizzly bears and American black bears often raid squirrel middens for whitebark pine seeds 4 an important pre hibernation food Squirrels northern flickers and mountain bluebirds often nest in whitebark pines and elk and blue grouse 4 use whitebark pine communities as summer habitat Fallen needles under these trees serve as beds that are used by deer and wild sheep seeking shelter during stormy weather 6 Threats edit The whitebark pine has been classified as endangered by the IUCN 1 Severe population decline in whitebark pine communities is attributed to various causes most significantly infection with white pine blister rust recent outbreaks of mountain pine beetles 2000 2014 disturbances in wildland fire ecology including fire suppression forest succession and climate change A study in the mid 2000s showed that whitebark pine had declined by 41 percent in the western Cascades due to two primary threats blister rust and pine beetles 7 Whitebark deaths in North Cascades National Park doubled from 2006 to 2011 7 White pine blister rust edit Further information Cronartium ribicola Many stands of Pinus albicaulis across the species entire natural range are infected with white pine blister rust Cronartium ribicola a fungal disease introduced from Europe In the northern Rocky Mountains of the United States whitebark pine mortality in some areas exceeds 90 percent where the disease infests nearly 143 000 acres 580 km2 Cronartium ribicola occurs in whitebark pine to the northern limits of the species in the coastal ranges of British Columbia and the Canadian Rocky Mountains The blister rust has also devastated the commercially valuable western white pine in these areas and made serious inroads in limber pine Pinus flexilis populations as well Nearly 80 percent of whitebark pines in Mount Rainier National Park are infected with blister rust 7 There is currently no effective method for controlling the spread and effects of blister rust However a small number of trees fewer than 5 in most populations harbor genetic resistance to blister rust 4 Restoration efforts undertaken by the U S Forest Service Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service in the northern Rocky Mountains involve harvesting cones from potentially and known resistant whitebark pines growing seedlings and outplanting seedlings in suitable sites In California where the blister rust is far less severe whitebark pine is still fairly common in the High Sierras 8 Mountain pine beetle edit Unusually large outbreaks of mountain pine beetle Dendroctonus ponderosae a species of bark beetle native to western North America have also contributed significantly to the widespread destruction of whitebark pine stands 9 The beetles both lay their eggs and introduce pathogenic fungi into their host trees which include many other species of pine and the combination of larval feeding and fungal colonization is typically sufficient to kill old or unhealthy trees However the beetles have recently expanded their attacks to younger healthier trees as well as older trees and climate change has been implicated as the primary culprit Since 2000 the climate at high elevations has warmed enough for the beetles to reproduce within whitebark pine often completing their life cycle within one year and enabling their populations to grow exponentially Entire forest vistas like that at Avalanche Ridge near Yellowstone National Park s east gate have become expanses of dead gray whitebarks 10 Scientists have attributed the recent warming trend to anthropogenic global warming 7 11 In 2007 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service estimated that beetles had killed whitebark pines across 500 000 acres 200 000 ha in the West while in 2009 beetles were estimated to have killed trees on 800 000 acres 320 000 ha the most since record keeping began 7 The pine beetle upsurge has killed nearly 750 000 whitebark pines in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem alone as of Fire suppression edit Fire suppression has led to slow population declines over the last century by altering the health and composition dynamics of stands without the fire ecology balancing their habitat and suppressing insect disease threats 12 In the absence of low level wildfire cycles whitebark pines in these stands are replaced by more shade tolerant fire intolerant species such as subalpine fir Abies lasiocarpa and Engelmann spruce Picea engelmannii In addition senescent and blister rust infected pine trees are not destroyed by natural periodic ground fires further diminishing the whitebark pine forest s vitality and survival 13 Protective efforts edit In 2012 the Canadian federal government declared whitebark pine endangered in accordance with the Species at Risk Act Accordingly it became the first federally listed endangered tree in western Canada 14 In 2022 the U S Fish amp Wildlife Service also acted It listed whitebark pine in the lowest category of vulnerability threatened Four distinct threats were described beginning with white pine blister rust as the primary stressor Mountain pine beetle altered fire regimes and the effects of climate change add to the challenges 15 This listing marks the first occasion in which a tree regarded as ecologically important over a vast range in the United States is acknowledged as vulnerable to extinction 16 In response to the ongoing decline of the tree throughout its range the Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation was formed Their mission is to raise awareness and promote conservation by sponsoring restoration projects publishing a newsletter called Nutcracker Notes and hosting an annual science and management workshop for anyone interested in whitebark pine 17 This U S group collaborates closely with the Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation of Canada 18 Uses edit nbsp Whitebark pine seeds Many Native Americans including the Salish peoples have been known to eat the seeds from the cones of this tree 19 4 They were roasted made into porridge and mixed with dry berries 4 References edit a b Mahalovich M Stritch L 2013 Pinus albicaulis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T39049A2885918 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 1 RLTS T39049A2885918 en Retrieved November 19 2021 Pinus albicaulis World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Royal Botanic Gardens Kew via The Plant List Note that this website has been superseded by World Flora Online Earle Christopher J ed 2018 Pinus albicaulis The Gymnosperm Database a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Arno Stephen F Hammerly Ramona P 2020 1977 Northwest Trees Identifying amp Understanding the Region s Native Trees field guide ed Seattle Mountaineers Books pp 26 35 43 ISBN 978 1 68051 329 5 OCLC 1141235469 Roady Laura 2010 Whitebark Pine Montana Outdoors Montana Fish Wildlife amp Parks Retrieved March 15 2015 Peattie Donald Culross 1953 A Natural History of Western Trees New York Bonanza Books p 33 a b c d e Welch Craig November 6 2011 Climate change beetle may doom rugged pine Seattle Times Retrieved September 9 2022 Brown Matthew December 14 2022 Whitebark pine that feeds grizzlies is threatened US says AP News Retrieved December 14 2022 Kershner Bruce et al 2008 National Wildlife Federation Field Guide to Trees of North America New York Sterling p 80 ISBN 978 1 4027 3875 3 Petit Charles January 30 2007 In the Rockies Pines Die and Bears Feel It New York Times Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 Ross Reynolds June 9 2015 Can A Dying Tree Species Be Saved At Crater Lake KUOW Kendall K C Keane R E 2001 Whitebark pine decline Infection mortality and population trends In Tomback D F Arno S F Keane R E eds Whitebark pine communities ecology and restoration Washington D C Island Press pp 221 242 Lorenz T J Aubry C Shoal R 2008 A review of the literature on seed fate in whitebark pine and the life history traits of Clark s nutcracker and pine squirrels PDF Portland OR U S Dept of Agriculture Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station OCLC 222226528 Zimmer Carl January 13 2023 For Trees Under Threat Flight May Be Best Response The New York Times New York Times U S Fish and Wildlife Service December 15 2022 Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants Threatened Species Status With Section 4 d Rule for Whitebark Pine Pinus albicaulis PDF Federal Register 87 240 76882 76917 Center for Biological Diversity Whitebark Pine Protected as Threatened Under Endangered Species Act Retrieved January 13 2023 Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation of Canada Whitney Stephen 1985 Western Forests The Audubon Society Nature Guides New York Knopf p 408 ISBN 0 394 73127 1 Further reading editChase J Smeaton 1911 Pinus albicaulis White bark pine White pine Dwarf pine Alpine white pine Cone bearing Trees of the California Mountains Eytel Carl illustrations Chicago A C McClurg amp Co pp 52 54 LCCN 11004975 OCLC 3477527 Keane Robert E Tomback Diana F Murray Michael P et al eds 2010 The future of high elevation five needle white pines in Western North America Proceedings of the High Five Symposium 28 30 June 2010 Fort Collins CO U S Department of Agriculture Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station Proceedings RMRS P 63 Lanner R M 1996 Made for each other a symbiosis of birds and pines OUP ISBN 0 19 508903 0 Logan J A Regniere J Powell J A 2003 Assessing the Impacts of Global Warming on Forest Pest Dynamics Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 1 3 130 137 doi 10 1890 1540 9295 2003 001 0130 ATIOGW 2 0 CO 2 Murray M P 2005 Our Threatened Timberlines The Plight of Whitebark Pine Ecosystems PDF Kalmiopsis 12 25 29 Schwandt J 2006 Whitebark pine in peril A case for restoration USDA Forest Service Northern Region R1 06 28 Tomback D F Arno S F Keane R E eds 2001 Whitebark pine communities ecology and restoration Washington D C Island Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pinus albicaulis category Jepson Manual treatment Whitebark Pine United States Geological Survey Archived from the original on July 14 2007 Pinus albicaulis in the CalPhotos photo database University of California Berkeley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pinus albicaulis amp oldid 1212344655, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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