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Stone pine

The stone pine, botanical name Pinus pinea, also known as the Italian stone pine, Mediterranean stone pine, umbrella pine and parasol pine, is a tree from the pine family (Pinaceae). The tree is native to the Mediterranean region, occurring in Southern Europe and the Levant. The species was introduced into North Africa millennia ago, and is also naturalized in the Canary Islands, South Africa and New South Wales.

Stone pine
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnospermae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Pinales
Family: Pinaceae
Genus: Pinus
Subgenus: P. subg. Pinus
Section: P. sect. Pinus
Subsection: Pinus subsect. Pinaster
Species:
P. pinea
Binomial name
Pinus pinea
Distribution map

Stone pines have been used and cultivated for their edible pine nuts since prehistoric times. They are widespread in horticultural cultivation as ornamental trees, planted in gardens and parks around the world. This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[2]

Pinus pinea is a diagnostic species of the vegetation class Pinetea halepensis.[3]

Distribution edit

The prehistoric range of Pinus pinea included North Africa in the Sahara Desert and Maghreb regions during a more humid climate period, in present-day Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya. Its contemporary natural range is in the Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub biome ecoregions and countries, including the following:

Southern Europe
 
Pinus pinea, Doñana National Park (Andalusia, Spain)

The Iberian conifer forests ecoregion of the Iberian Peninsula in Spain and Portugal; the Italian sclerophyllous and semideciduous forests ecoregion in France and Italy; the Tyrrhenian-Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests ecoregion of southern Italy, Sicily, and Sardinia; the Illyrian deciduous forests of the eastern coast of the Ionian and Adriatic Seas in Croatia and Albania; the Crimean Submediterranean forest complex ecoregion on Krasnodar Krai (Russia) and the Crimea Peninsula; and the Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests ecoregion of the southern Balkan Peninsula in Greece. In many parts of northern Italy, large parks with pine trees were laid out by the sea. Examples are the Pineta of Jesolo and Barcola, the Urban Beach of Trieste.

In Greece, although the species is not widely distributed,[4] an extensive stone pine forest exists in western Peloponnese at Strofylia[5] on the peninsula separating the Kalogria Lagoon from the Mediterranean Sea. This coastal forest is at least 13 kilometres (8 miles) long, with dense and tall stands of Pinus pinea mixed with Pinus halepensis.[6] Currently, Pinus halepensis is outcompeting stone pines in many locations of the forest.[7] Another location in Greece is at Koukounaries on the northern Aegean island of Skiathos at the southwest corner of the island. This is a half-mile-long dense stand of stone and Aleppo pines that lies between a lagoon and the Aegean Sea.[8]

Western Asia

In Western Asia, the Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forests ecoregion in Turkey; and the Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests ecoregion in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel and in the Palestinian Territories.

Northern Africa

The Mediterranean woodlands and forests ecoregion of North Africa, in Morocco and Algeria.

South Africa

In the Western Cape Province, the pines were according to legend planted by the French Huguenot refugees who settled at the Cape of Good Hope during the late 17th century and who brought the seeds with them from France. The tree is known in the Afrikaans language as kroonden.

Description edit

 
Stone pine in Brissago, on Lake Maggiore

The stone pine is a coniferous evergreen tree that can exceed 25 metres (80 feet) in height, but 12–20 m (40–65 ft) is more typical. In youth, it is a bushy globe, in mid-age an umbrella canopy on a thick trunk, and, in maturity, a broad and flat crown over 8 m (26 ft) in width.[2] The bark is thick, red-brown and deeply fissured into broad vertical plates.

Foliage

The flexible mid-green leaves are needle-like, in bundles of two, and are 10–20 cm (4–8 in) long (exceptionally up to 30 cm or 12 in). Young trees up to 5–10 years old bear juvenile leaves, which are very different, single (not paired), 2–4 cm (341+12 in) long, glaucous blue-green; the adult leaves appear mixed with juvenile leaves from the fourth or fifth year on, replacing it fully by around the tenth year. Juvenile leaves are also produced in regrowth following injury, such as a broken shoot, on older trees.

 
Cone

The cones are broad, ovoid, 8–15 cm (3–6 in) long, and take 36 months to mature, longer than any other pine. The seeds (pine nuts, piñones, pinhões, pinoli, or pignons) are large, 2 cm (34 in) long, and pale brown with a powdery black coating that rubs off easily, and have a rudimentary 4–8 mm (532516 in) wing that falls off very easily. The wing is ineffective for wind dispersal, and the seeds are animal-dispersed, originally mainly by the Iberian magpie, but in recent history largely by humans.

Use edit

Food edit

Pinus pinea has been cultivated extensively for at least 6,000 years for its edible pine nuts, which have been trade items since early historic times. The tree has been cultivated throughout the Mediterranean region for so long that it has naturalized, and is often considered native beyond its natural range.

Ornamental edit

 
Pines on Via Appia Antica

The tree is among the current symbols of Rome.[9] It was first planted in Rome during the Roman Republic, where many historic Roman roads, such as the Via Appia, were (and still are) embellished with lines of stone pines. Stone pines were planted on the hills of the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul for ornamental purposes during the Ottoman period. In Italy, the stone pine has been an aesthetic landscape element since the Italian Renaissance garden period. In the 1700s, P. pinea began being introduced as an ornamental tree to other Mediterranean climate regions of the world, and is now often found in gardens and parks in South Africa, California, and Australia. It has naturalized beyond cities in South Africa to the extent that it is listed as an invasive species there. It is also planted in western Europe up to southern Scotland, and on the East Coast of the United States up to New Jersey.

In the United Kingdom it has won the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[10][11]

Small specimens are used for bonsai, and also grown in large pots and planters. The year-old seedlings are seasonally available as table-top Christmas trees 20–30 cm (8–12 in) tall.

Other edit

Other products of economic value include resin, bark for tannin extraction, and empty pine cone shells for fuel. Pinus pinea is also currently widely cultivated around the Mediterranean for environmental protection such as consolidation of coastal dunes, soil conservation and protection of coastal agricultural crops.[12]

Pests edit

The introduced western conifer seed beetle (Leptoglossus occidentalis) was accidentally imported with timber to northern Italy in the late 1990s from western USA, and has spread across Europe as an invasive pest species since then. It feeds on the sap of developing conifer cones throughout its life, and its sap-sucking causes the developing seeds to wither and misdevelop. It has destroyed most of the pine nut seeds in Italy, threatening P. pinea in its native habitats there.[13]

Pestalotiopsis pini (a genus of ascomycete fungi), was found as an emerging pathogen on Pinus pinea in Portugal. Evidence of shoot blight and stem necrosis were found in stone pine orchards and urban areas in 2020. The edible pine nut production has been decreasing in the affected area due to several factors, including pests and diseases. The fungus was found on needles, shoots and trunks of Pinus pinea and also on Pinus pinaster. Pestalotiopsis fungal species could represent a threat to the health of pine forests in the Mediterranean basin.[14]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Farjon, A. (2013). "Pinus pinea". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2013: e.T42391A2977175. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-1.RLTS.T42391A2977175.en. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Pinus pinea". Royal Horticultural Society. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  3. ^ Bonari, Gianmaria; Fernández‐González, Federico; Çoban, Süleyman; Monteiro‐Henriques, Tiago; Bergmeier, Erwin; Didukh, Yakiv P.; Xystrakis, Fotios; Angiolini, Claudia; Chytrý, Kryštof; Acosta, Alicia T.R.; Agrillo, Emiliano (January 2021). Ewald, Jörg (ed.). "Classification of the Mediterranean lowland to submontane pine forest vegetation". Applied Vegetation Science. 24 (1). doi:10.1111/avsc.12544. hdl:10400.5/21923. ISSN 1402-2001. S2CID 228839165.
  4. ^ Earle, Christopher J. "Pinus pinea". The Gymnosperm database. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Strofylia – Greece". F:ACTS!. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  6. ^ "GR098 Kalogria lagoon, Strofilia forest, and Lamia marshes". Hellenic Ornithological Society. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  7. ^ Ganatsas, Petros. "Pinus halepensis invasion in Pinus pinea habitat" (PDF). Journal for Nature Conservation. Elsevier. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  8. ^ "NatureBank – Βιότοπος NATURA – SKIATHOS: KOUKOUNARIES KAI EVRYTERI THALASSIA PERIOCHI". filotis.itia.ntua.gr.
  9. ^ Povoledo, Elisabetta (13 August 2023). "Rome's Iconic Umbrella Pines Imperiled by Pests and the Ax". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  10. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Pinus pinea". Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  11. ^ "AGM Plants – Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 71. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  12. ^ Fady, B.; Finesch, S. & Vendramin, G. (2004), Italian stone pine − Pinus pinea: Technical guidelines for genetic conservation and use (PDF), European Forest Genetic Resources Programme
  13. ^ PR (20 October 2010). . Public Radio International. Archived from the original on 13 August 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  14. ^ Silva, Ana Cristina; Diogo, Eugénio; Henriques, Joana; Ramos, Ana Paula; Sandoval-Denis, Marcelo; Crous, Pedro W.; Bragança, Helena (2020). "Pestalotiopsis pini sp. nov., an Emerging Pathogen on Stone Pine (Pinus pinea L.)". Forests. 11 (8): 805. doi:10.3390/f11080805. hdl:10400.5/20420.

External links edit

stone, pine, confused, with, japanese, umbrella, pine, swiss, stone, pine, stone, pine, botanical, name, pinus, pinea, also, known, italian, stone, pine, mediterranean, stone, pine, umbrella, pine, parasol, pine, tree, from, pine, family, pinaceae, tree, nativ. Not to be confused with Japanese umbrella pine or Swiss stone pine The stone pine botanical name Pinus pinea also known as the Italian stone pine Mediterranean stone pine umbrella pine and parasol pine is a tree from the pine family Pinaceae The tree is native to the Mediterranean region occurring in Southern Europe and the Levant The species was introduced into North Africa millennia ago and is also naturalized in the Canary Islands South Africa and New South Wales Stone pineConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade GymnospermaeDivision PinophytaClass PinopsidaOrder PinalesFamily PinaceaeGenus PinusSubgenus P subg PinusSection P sect PinusSubsection Pinus subsect PinasterSpecies P pineaBinomial namePinus pineaL Distribution mapStone pines have been used and cultivated for their edible pine nuts since prehistoric times They are widespread in horticultural cultivation as ornamental trees planted in gardens and parks around the world This plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 2 Pinus pinea is a diagnostic species of the vegetation class Pinetea halepensis 3 Contents 1 Distribution 2 Description 3 Use 3 1 Food 3 2 Ornamental 3 3 Other 4 Pests 5 Gallery 6 References 7 External linksDistribution editThe prehistoric range of Pinus pinea included North Africa in the Sahara Desert and Maghreb regions during a more humid climate period in present day Morocco Algeria Tunisia and Libya Its contemporary natural range is in the Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub biome ecoregions and countries including the following Southern Europe nbsp Pinus pinea Donana National Park Andalusia Spain The Iberian conifer forests ecoregion of the Iberian Peninsula in Spain and Portugal the Italian sclerophyllous and semideciduous forests ecoregion in France and Italy the Tyrrhenian Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests ecoregion of southern Italy Sicily and Sardinia the Illyrian deciduous forests of the eastern coast of the Ionian and Adriatic Seas in Croatia and Albania the Crimean Submediterranean forest complex ecoregion on Krasnodar Krai Russia and the Crimea Peninsula and the Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests ecoregion of the southern Balkan Peninsula in Greece In many parts of northern Italy large parks with pine trees were laid out by the sea Examples are the Pineta of Jesolo and Barcola the Urban Beach of Trieste In Greece although the species is not widely distributed 4 an extensive stone pine forest exists in western Peloponnese at Strofylia 5 on the peninsula separating the Kalogria Lagoon from the Mediterranean Sea This coastal forest is at least 13 kilometres 8 miles long with dense and tall stands of Pinus pinea mixed with Pinus halepensis 6 Currently Pinus halepensis is outcompeting stone pines in many locations of the forest 7 Another location in Greece is at Koukounaries on the northern Aegean island of Skiathos at the southwest corner of the island This is a half mile long dense stand of stone and Aleppo pines that lies between a lagoon and the Aegean Sea 8 Western AsiaIn Western Asia the Eastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forests ecoregion in Turkey and the Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests ecoregion in Turkey Syria Lebanon Israel and in the Palestinian Territories Northern AfricaThe Mediterranean woodlands and forests ecoregion of North Africa in Morocco and Algeria South AfricaIn the Western Cape Province the pines were according to legend planted by the French Huguenot refugees who settled at the Cape of Good Hope during the late 17th century and who brought the seeds with them from France The tree is known in the Afrikaans language as kroonden Description edit nbsp Stone pine in Brissago on Lake MaggioreThe stone pine is a coniferous evergreen tree that can exceed 25 metres 80 feet in height but 12 20 m 40 65 ft is more typical In youth it is a bushy globe in mid age an umbrella canopy on a thick trunk and in maturity a broad and flat crown over 8 m 26 ft in width 2 The bark is thick red brown and deeply fissured into broad vertical plates FoliageThe flexible mid green leaves are needle like in bundles of two and are 10 20 cm 4 8 in long exceptionally up to 30 cm or 12 in Young trees up to 5 10 years old bear juvenile leaves which are very different single not paired 2 4 cm 3 4 1 1 2 in long glaucous blue green the adult leaves appear mixed with juvenile leaves from the fourth or fifth year on replacing it fully by around the tenth year Juvenile leaves are also produced in regrowth following injury such as a broken shoot on older trees nbsp ConeThe cones are broad ovoid 8 15 cm 3 6 in long and take 36 months to mature longer than any other pine The seeds pine nuts pinones pinhoes pinoli or pignons are large 2 cm 3 4 in long and pale brown with a powdery black coating that rubs off easily and have a rudimentary 4 8 mm 5 32 5 16 in wing that falls off very easily The wing is ineffective for wind dispersal and the seeds are animal dispersed originally mainly by the Iberian magpie but in recent history largely by humans Use editFood edit Pinus pinea has been cultivated extensively for at least 6 000 years for its edible pine nuts which have been trade items since early historic times The tree has been cultivated throughout the Mediterranean region for so long that it has naturalized and is often considered native beyond its natural range Ornamental edit nbsp Pines on Via Appia AnticaThe tree is among the current symbols of Rome 9 It was first planted in Rome during the Roman Republic where many historic Roman roads such as the Via Appia were and still are embellished with lines of stone pines Stone pines were planted on the hills of the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul for ornamental purposes during the Ottoman period In Italy the stone pine has been an aesthetic landscape element since the Italian Renaissance garden period In the 1700s P pinea began being introduced as an ornamental tree to other Mediterranean climate regions of the world and is now often found in gardens and parks in South Africa California and Australia It has naturalized beyond cities in South Africa to the extent that it is listed as an invasive species there It is also planted in western Europe up to southern Scotland and on the East Coast of the United States up to New Jersey In the United Kingdom it has won the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 10 11 Small specimens are used for bonsai and also grown in large pots and planters The year old seedlings are seasonally available as table top Christmas trees 20 30 cm 8 12 in tall Other edit Other products of economic value include resin bark for tannin extraction and empty pine cone shells for fuel Pinus pinea is also currently widely cultivated around the Mediterranean for environmental protection such as consolidation of coastal dunes soil conservation and protection of coastal agricultural crops 12 Pests editThe introduced western conifer seed beetle Leptoglossus occidentalis was accidentally imported with timber to northern Italy in the late 1990s from western USA and has spread across Europe as an invasive pest species since then It feeds on the sap of developing conifer cones throughout its life and its sap sucking causes the developing seeds to wither and misdevelop It has destroyed most of the pine nut seeds in Italy threatening P pinea in its native habitats there 13 Pestalotiopsis pini a genus of ascomycete fungi was found as an emerging pathogen on Pinus pinea in Portugal Evidence of shoot blight and stem necrosis were found in stone pine orchards and urban areas in 2020 The edible pine nut production has been decreasing in the affected area due to several factors including pests and diseases The fungus was found on needles shoots and trunks of Pinus pinea and also on Pinus pinaster Pestalotiopsis fungal species could represent a threat to the health of pine forests in the Mediterranean basin 14 Gallery edit nbsp Needles of a juvenile left and adult right nbsp Seedling nbsp Close up of the bark s vertical texture nbsp Trunk and crown of mature tree nbsp Pines on Via Appia Antica nbsp Adult stone pines at Villa Borghese gardens Rome nbsp Pine at Villa Medici Rome nbsp The tree is among the symbols of Rome and its historic streets such as the Via dei Fori Imperiali nbsp Stone pines were planted on the hills of the Bosphorus strait in Istanbul for ornamental purposes during the Ottoman period References edit Farjon A 2013 Pinus pinea IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T42391A2977175 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 1 RLTS T42391A2977175 en Retrieved 6 September 2021 a b Pinus pinea Royal Horticultural Society Retrieved 23 July 2013 Bonari Gianmaria Fernandez Gonzalez Federico Coban Suleyman Monteiro Henriques Tiago Bergmeier Erwin Didukh Yakiv P Xystrakis Fotios Angiolini Claudia Chytry Krystof Acosta Alicia T R Agrillo Emiliano January 2021 Ewald Jorg ed Classification of the Mediterranean lowland to submontane pine forest vegetation Applied Vegetation Science 24 1 doi 10 1111 avsc 12544 hdl 10400 5 21923 ISSN 1402 2001 S2CID 228839165 Earle Christopher J Pinus pinea The Gymnosperm database Retrieved 23 July 2013 Strofylia Greece F ACTS Retrieved 23 July 2013 GR098 Kalogria lagoon Strofilia forest and Lamia marshes Hellenic Ornithological Society Retrieved 23 July 2013 Ganatsas Petros Pinus halepensis invasion in Pinus pinea habitat PDF Journal for Nature Conservation Elsevier Retrieved 23 July 2013 NatureBank Biotopos NATURA SKIATHOS KOUKOUNARIES KAI EVRYTERI THALASSIA PERIOCHI filotis itia ntua gr Povoledo Elisabetta 13 August 2023 Rome s Iconic Umbrella Pines Imperiled by Pests and the Ax The New York Times Retrieved 14 August 2023 RHS Plantfinder Pinus pinea Retrieved 30 April 2018 AGM Plants Ornamental PDF Royal Horticultural Society July 2017 p 71 Retrieved 25 April 2018 Fady B Finesch S amp Vendramin G 2004 Italian stone pine Pinus pinea Technical guidelines for genetic conservation and use PDF European Forest Genetic Resources Programme PR 20 October 2010 Italy s pine nut pest Public Radio International Archived from the original on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2012 Silva Ana Cristina Diogo Eugenio Henriques Joana Ramos Ana Paula Sandoval Denis Marcelo Crous Pedro W Braganca Helena 2020 Pestalotiopsis pini sp nov an Emerging Pathogen on Stone Pine Pinus pinea L Forests 11 8 805 doi 10 3390 f11080805 hdl 10400 5 20420 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pinus pinea Stone pine Pinus pinea distribution map genetic conservation units and related resources European Forest Genetic Resources Programme EUFORGEN 1 The Gymnosperm Database efri gov tr A case study on stone pine farms in Turkey dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stone pine amp oldid 1206028447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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