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Pinus sabiniana

Pinus sabiniana (sometimes spelled P. sabineana), with vernacular names including towani pine, foothill pine, gray pine, bull pine, and digger pine,[2][3][4][5][6] is a pine endemic to California in the United States.[7][8] Some sources discourage using the name "digger pine," considering it pejorative [3][4] ("digger" was a slur commonly used to refer to Indigenous Americans in the Great Basin and California).[9]

Pinus sabiniana
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. Trifoliae
Subsection: P. subsect. Ponderosae
Species:
P. sabiniana
Binomial name
Pinus sabiniana

Description edit

The Pinus sabiniana tree typically grows to 36–45 feet (11–14 m), but can reach 105 feet (32 m) feet in height. The needles of the pine are in fascicles (bundles) of three, distinctively pale gray-green, sparse and drooping, and grow to 20–30 cm (8–12 inches) in length. The seed cones are large and heavy, 12–35 cm (4+3413+34 inches) in length and almost as wide as they are long.[5][3][10] When fresh, they weigh from 0.3 to 0.7 kilograms (0.7 to 1.5 lb), rarely over 1 kilogram (2.2 lb).[11] The male cones grow at the base of shoots on the lower branches.[5][3][10]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Distribution map

Pinus sabiniana grows at elevations between sea level and 1,200 metres (4,000 ft) and is common in the northern and interior portions of the California Floristic Province. It is found throughout the Sierra Nevada and Coast Ranges foothills that ring the Central, San Joaquin and interior valleys; the Transverse and Peninsular Ranges; and Mojave Desert sky islands.[3][10] Multiple specimens have also been found in Southern Oregon as well.[12][13] It is adapted to long, hot, dry summers and is found in areas with an unusually wide range of precipitation: from an average of 250 mm (10 in) per year at the edge of the Mojave to 1,780 mm (70 in) in parts of the Sierra Nevada.[11] It prefers rocky, well drained soil, but also grows in serpentine soil and heavy, poorly drained clay soils. It commonly occurs in association with Quercus douglasii,[14] and "Oak/Foothill Pine vegetation" (also known as "Oak/Gray Pine vegetation") is used as a description of a type of habitat characteristic within the California chaparral and woodlands ecoregion in California, providing a sparse overstory above a canopy of the oak woodland.

Ecology and uses edit

Pinus sabiniana needles are the only known food of the caterpillars of the Gelechiid moth Chionodes sabinianus. Fossil evidence suggests that it has only recently become adapted to the Mediterranean climate as its closest relatives are part of the Madrean pine-oak woodlands found at higher elevations in the southwest US and Mexico.[15] Some Native American groups relied heavily on sweet pine nuts for food[16] and are thought to have contributed to the current distribution pattern, including the large gap in distribution in Tulare County. Native Americans also consumed the roots.[17]

Special uses edit

Protein and fat nutritional value of the seed are similar to Pinus pinea seeds and figured in the local indigenous diet.[18]

Wood uses historically were determined by its particular characteristics, e.g., 0.43 mean specific gravity nearly equal to Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii); strength properties similar to ponderosa pine; Kraft pulps high in bursting with tensile strength comparable to some northern conifer pulps; and foothill stands loggable in winter, when higher-altitude species were inaccessible. However, the high amounts of resin and compression wood, the often crooked form, heavy weight, and low stand density, made it expensive otherwise to log, transport and process. Commercial value decreased by the 1960s,[18] to limited use for railroad ties, box "shook",[19] pallet stock, and chips.

It may still offer potential as windbreak shelterbelt plantings.[18]

The main turpentine constituent, heptane, an alkane hydrocarbon, at about 3 percent of needle and twig oil,[18] is unusual in botany; the only other source in nature perhaps being the Pittosporum resiniferum known as "petroleum nut" or kerosene tree.

Taxonomy edit

Common name edit

The name digger pine supposedly came from the observation that the Paiute foraged for its seeds by digging around the base of the tree, although it is more likely that the term was first applied to the people; "Digger Indians" was in common use in California literature from the 1800s. The historically more common name digger pine is still in widespread use. The Jepson Manual advises avoiding this name as the authors believe "digger" is pejorative in origin.[20][21] It is also sometimes thought of as a pinyon pine, though it does not belong to that group.

Pinus sabiniana in Californian languages
Language Name
Achumawi tujhalo
Awaswas Ohlone hireeni (pine tree); saak (pinenut)
Chalon Ohlone šaak (pinenut)
Chimariko hatcho
Chochenyo Ohlone saak (pinenut)
Chukchansi Yokuts ton' (pinenut); shaaxal' (pine sap)
Karuk axyúsip
Klamath gapga [22]
Konkow tä-nē’ [23]
Maidu towáni
Mono tunah
Mutsun Ohlone hireeni; saak (pinenut)
Patwin tuwa; sanank (pinenut)
Rumsen Ohlone xirren
Southern Sierra Miwok sakky
Wappo náyo
Wintu xisi (unripe pinenut); chati (ripe pinenut)
Yana c’ala’i [22]

Botanical name edit

 
Cone of Pinus sabiniana

The scientific botanical name with the standard spelling sabiniana commemorates Joseph Sabine, secretary of the Horticultural Society of London. Some botanists proposed a new spelling sabineana, because they were confused with Latin grammar. The proposal has not been accepted by the relevant authorities (i.e. United States Department of Agriculture, The Jepson Manual or Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN).[2][3][5][24] The GRIN notes that the spelling sabiniana agrees with a provision in the Vienna Code of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature, the governing body of botanical nomenclature. In that code, recommendation 60.2C states that personal names can be Latinized in species epithets: 'Sabine' is Latinised to sabinius, with the addition of the suffix "-anus" (pertaining to) the word becomes sabiniana (In Latin, trees are feminine, irrespective if the word ends with a masculine suffix, i.e. pinus).[24][25] The GRIN database notes that Sabine's last name is not correctable and therefore Pinus sabiniana is the proper name for the species.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Farjon, A. (2013). "Pinus sabiniana". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2013: e.T42413A2978429. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-1.RLTS.T42413A2978429.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Data Source and References for Pinus sabiniana (California foothill pine)". USDA PLANTS. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Hickman, James C., ed. (1993). "Pinus sabiniana". The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California. University and Jepson Herbaria. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  4. ^ a b Earle, Christopher J., ed. (2018). "Pinus sabiniana". The Gymnosperm Database. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d "Pinus sabiniana". Calflora. Berkeley, California: The Calflora Database. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 February 2002. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  7. ^ Cole 1939.
  8. ^ Beissner 1909.
  9. ^ Lonnberg, Allan (1981). "The Digger Indian Stereotype in California". Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology. 3 (2).
  10. ^ a b c "Classification for Kingdom Plantae Down to Species Pinus sabiniana Douglas ex Douglas". USDA PLANTS. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  11. ^ a b Powers, Robert F. (1990). "Pinus sabiniana". In Burns, Russell M.; Honkala, Barbara H. (eds.). Conifers. Silvics of North America. Vol. 1. Washington, D.C.: United States Forest Service (USFS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Retrieved 17 March 2016 – via Southern Research Station.
  12. ^ Frank Callahan. "Discovering Gray Pine (Pinus sabiniana) in Oregon" (PDF). Npsoregon.org. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  13. ^ "Pinus sabiniana (gray pine) description - The Gymnosperm Database". www.conifers.org. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  14. ^ Hogan 2008.
  15. ^ Munz, P. "A California Flora and supplement" University of California Press
  16. ^ Peattie, Donald Culross (1953). A Natural History of Western Trees. New York: Bonanza Books. p. 94.
  17. ^ Whitney, Stephen (1985). Western Forests (The Audubon Society Nature Guides). New York: Knopf. p. 409. ISBN 0-394-73127-1.
  18. ^ a b c d "Digger Pine". USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station. Retrieved 10 February 2022.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  19. ^ "Shook". 23 December 2021.
  20. ^ Hickman, J.C. (Ed.) "The Jepson Manual, Higher Plants of California". University of California Press, Berkeley, 1993 p.120.
  21. ^ Hickman, James C., ed. (1993). "Pinus sabiniana". The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California. University and Jepson Herbaria. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
  22. ^ a b Hinton, Leanne (1996). Flutes of fire :essays on California Indian languages. Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books. ISBN 978-0-930588-62-5.
  23. ^ Chesnut, Victor King (1902). Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California. Government Printing Office. p. 408. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  24. ^ a b "Pinus sabiniana Douglas". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  25. ^ International Code of Botanical Nomenclature. 2006. Recommendation 60C.2. Accessed online: 1 October 2010.

References edit

  • Cole, James E. (1939). The Cone-bearing Trees of Yosemite: Digger Pine.
  • A. Farjon (2005). Pines: Drawings and descriptions of the genus Pinus. Brill. ISBN 90-04-13916-8
  • Hogan, C. Michael (2008). Stromberg, Nicklas (ed.). . GlobalTwitcher. Archived from the original on 28 February 2012.
  • Discovery Channel (2010), MythBusters, Episode 138
  • Beissner, Ludwig (1909). Handbuch der Nadelholzkunde: Systematik, Beschreibung, Verwendung und Kultur der Ginkgoaceen, Freiland- Coniferen und Gnetaceen. Für Gärtner, Forstleute und Botaniker. P. Parey.
  • Lonnberg, Allan (1981). "The Digger Indian Stereotype in California". Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology. 3 (2).

Further reading edit

External links edit

pinus, sabiniana, sometimes, spelled, sabineana, with, vernacular, names, including, towani, pine, foothill, pine, gray, pine, bull, pine, digger, pine, pine, endemic, california, united, states, some, sources, discourage, using, name, digger, pine, considerin. Pinus sabiniana sometimes spelled P sabineana with vernacular names including towani pine foothill pine gray pine bull pine and digger pine 2 3 4 5 6 is a pine endemic to California in the United States 7 8 Some sources discourage using the name digger pine considering it pejorative 3 4 digger was a slur commonly used to refer to Indigenous Americans in the Great Basin and California 9 Pinus sabinianaConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade GymnospermaeDivision PinophytaClass PinopsidaOrder PinalesFamily PinaceaeGenus PinusSubgenus P subg PinusSection P sect TrifoliaeSubsection P subsect PonderosaeSpecies P sabinianaBinomial namePinus sabinianaDouglas ex D Don Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Ecology and uses 3 1 Special uses 4 Taxonomy 4 1 Common name 4 2 Botanical name 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDescription editThe Pinus sabiniana tree typically grows to 36 45 feet 11 14 m but can reach 105 feet 32 m feet in height The needles of the pine are in fascicles bundles of three distinctively pale gray green sparse and drooping and grow to 20 30 cm 8 12 inches in length The seed cones are large and heavy 12 35 cm 4 3 4 13 3 4 inches in length and almost as wide as they are long 5 3 10 When fresh they weigh from 0 3 to 0 7 kilograms 0 7 to 1 5 lb rarely over 1 kilogram 2 2 lb 11 The male cones grow at the base of shoots on the lower branches 5 3 10 nbsp Pollen cones nbsp Bark nbsp Cone seeds and resin nbsp FoliageDistribution and habitat edit nbsp Distribution mapPinus sabiniana grows at elevations between sea level and 1 200 metres 4 000 ft and is common in the northern and interior portions of the California Floristic Province It is found throughout the Sierra Nevada and Coast Ranges foothills that ring the Central San Joaquin and interior valleys the Transverse and Peninsular Ranges and Mojave Desert sky islands 3 10 Multiple specimens have also been found in Southern Oregon as well 12 13 It is adapted to long hot dry summers and is found in areas with an unusually wide range of precipitation from an average of 250 mm 10 in per year at the edge of the Mojave to 1 780 mm 70 in in parts of the Sierra Nevada 11 It prefers rocky well drained soil but also grows in serpentine soil and heavy poorly drained clay soils It commonly occurs in association with Quercus douglasii 14 and Oak Foothill Pine vegetation also known as Oak Gray Pine vegetation is used as a description of a type of habitat characteristic within the California chaparral and woodlands ecoregion in California providing a sparse overstory above a canopy of the oak woodland nbsp P sabiniana in chaparral habitat in Sacramento Valley nbsp P sabiniana in mountain foothills habitat in Pinnacles National MonumentEcology and uses editPinus sabiniana needles are the only known food of the caterpillars of the Gelechiid moth Chionodes sabinianus Fossil evidence suggests that it has only recently become adapted to the Mediterranean climate as its closest relatives are part of the Madrean pine oak woodlands found at higher elevations in the southwest US and Mexico 15 Some Native American groups relied heavily on sweet pine nuts for food 16 and are thought to have contributed to the current distribution pattern including the large gap in distribution in Tulare County Native Americans also consumed the roots 17 Special uses edit Protein and fat nutritional value of the seed are similar to Pinus pinea seeds and figured in the local indigenous diet 18 Wood uses historically were determined by its particular characteristics e g 0 43 mean specific gravity nearly equal to Douglas fir Pseudotsuga menziesii strength properties similar to ponderosa pine Kraft pulps high in bursting with tensile strength comparable to some northern conifer pulps and foothill stands loggable in winter when higher altitude species were inaccessible However the high amounts of resin and compression wood the often crooked form heavy weight and low stand density made it expensive otherwise to log transport and process Commercial value decreased by the 1960s 18 to limited use for railroad ties box shook 19 pallet stock and chips It may still offer potential as windbreak shelterbelt plantings 18 The main turpentine constituent heptane an alkane hydrocarbon at about 3 percent of needle and twig oil 18 is unusual in botany the only other source in nature perhaps being the Pittosporum resiniferum known as petroleum nut or kerosene tree Taxonomy editCommon name edit The name digger pine supposedly came from the observation that the Paiute foraged for its seeds by digging around the base of the tree although it is more likely that the term was first applied to the people Digger Indians was in common use in California literature from the 1800s The historically more common name digger pine is still in widespread use The Jepson Manual advises avoiding this name as the authors believe digger is pejorative in origin 20 21 It is also sometimes thought of as a pinyon pine though it does not belong to that group Pinus sabiniana in Californian languages Language NameAchumawi tujhaloAwaswas Ohlone hireeni pine tree saak pinenut Chalon Ohlone saak pinenut Chimariko hatchoChochenyo Ohlone saak pinenut Chukchansi Yokuts ton pinenut shaaxal pine sap Karuk axyusipKlamath gapga 22 Konkow ta ne 23 Maidu towaniMono tunahMutsun Ohlone hireeni saak pinenut Patwin tuwa sanank pinenut Rumsen Ohlone xirrenSouthern Sierra Miwok sakkyWappo nayoWintu xisi unripe pinenut chati ripe pinenut Yana c ala i 22 Botanical name edit nbsp Cone of Pinus sabinianaThe scientific botanical name with the standard spelling sabiniana commemorates Joseph Sabine secretary of the Horticultural Society of London Some botanists proposed a new spelling sabineana because they were confused with Latin grammar The proposal has not been accepted by the relevant authorities i e United States Department of Agriculture The Jepson Manual or Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN 2 3 5 24 The GRIN notes that the spelling sabiniana agrees with a provision in the Vienna Code of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature the governing body of botanical nomenclature In that code recommendation 60 2C states that personal names can be Latinized in species epithets Sabine is Latinised to sabinius with the addition of the suffix anus pertaining to the word becomes sabiniana In Latin trees are feminine irrespective if the word ends with a masculine suffix i e pinus 24 25 The GRIN database notes that Sabine s last name is not correctable and therefore Pinus sabiniana is the proper name for the species Notes edit Farjon A 2013 Pinus sabiniana IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T42413A2978429 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 1 RLTS T42413A2978429 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b Data Source and References for Pinus sabiniana California foothill pine USDA PLANTS Retrieved 20 October 2012 a b c d e f Hickman James C ed 1993 Pinus sabiniana The Jepson Manual Higher Plants of California University and Jepson Herbaria Retrieved 20 October 2012 a b Earle Christopher J ed 2018 Pinus sabiniana The Gymnosperm Database Retrieved 8 February 2019 a b c d Pinus sabiniana Calflora Berkeley California The Calflora Database Retrieved 20 October 2012 Pinus sabiniana Archived from the original on 25 February 2002 Retrieved 15 July 2022 Cole 1939 Beissner 1909 Lonnberg Allan 1981 The Digger Indian Stereotype in California Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 3 2 a b c Classification for Kingdom Plantae Down to Species Pinus sabiniana Douglas ex Douglas USDA PLANTS Retrieved 20 October 2012 a b Powers Robert F 1990 Pinus sabiniana In Burns Russell M Honkala Barbara H eds Conifers Silvics of North America Vol 1 Washington D C United States Forest Service USFS United States Department of Agriculture USDA Retrieved 17 March 2016 via Southern Research Station Frank Callahan Discovering Gray Pine Pinus sabiniana in Oregon PDF Npsoregon org Retrieved 24 March 2022 Pinus sabiniana gray pine description The Gymnosperm Database www conifers org Retrieved 26 February 2023 Hogan 2008 Munz P A California Flora and supplement University of California Press Peattie Donald Culross 1953 A Natural History of Western Trees New York Bonanza Books p 94 Whitney Stephen 1985 Western Forests The Audubon Society Nature Guides New York Knopf p 409 ISBN 0 394 73127 1 a b c d Digger Pine USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station Retrieved 10 February 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Shook 23 December 2021 Hickman J C Ed The Jepson Manual Higher Plants of California University of California Press Berkeley 1993 p 120 Hickman James C ed 1993 Pinus sabiniana The Jepson Manual Higher Plants of California University and Jepson Herbaria Retrieved 6 January 2011 a b Hinton Leanne 1996 Flutes of fire essays on California Indian languages Berkeley CA Heyday Books ISBN 978 0 930588 62 5 Chesnut Victor King 1902 Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County California Government Printing Office p 408 Retrieved 24 August 2012 a b Pinus sabiniana Douglas Germplasm Resources Information Network Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved 1 October 2010 International Code of Botanical Nomenclature 2006 Recommendation 60C 2 Accessed online 1 October 2010 References editCole James E 1939 The Cone bearing Trees of Yosemite Digger Pine A Farjon 2005 Pines Drawings and descriptions of the genus Pinus Brill ISBN 90 04 13916 8 Hogan C Michael 2008 Stromberg Nicklas ed Blue Oak Quercus douglasii GlobalTwitcher Archived from the original on 28 February 2012 Discovery Channel 2010 MythBusters Episode 138 Beissner Ludwig 1909 Handbuch der Nadelholzkunde Systematik Beschreibung Verwendung und Kultur der Ginkgoaceen Freiland Coniferen und Gnetaceen Fur Gartner Forstleute und Botaniker P Parey Lonnberg Allan 1981 The Digger Indian Stereotype in California Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 3 2 Further reading editChase J Smeaton 1911 Pinus sabiniana Digger pine Gray pine Pinon pine Nut pine Cone bearing Trees of the California Mountains Eytel Carl illustrations Chicago A C McClurg amp Co pp 28 30 LCCN 11004975 OCLC 3477527 External links edit nbsp Media related to Pinus sabiniana category at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Pinus sabiniana at Wikispecies Jepson eFlora The Jepson Herbarium University of California Berkeley USDA PLANTS Treatment for Pinus sabiniana California foothill pine Pinus sabiniana in the CalPhotos photo database University of California Berkeley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pinus sabiniana amp oldid 1191424162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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