Virginia Pine is a member of the Pine family Pinaceae and is known scientifically as Pinus virginiana. It was once thought of as a forest weed but it has now become quite commercially important. It is also referred to as the spruce pine or Jersey pine. It does extremely well when it comes to reforesting cutover and abandoned land that it is now a main source of lumber and pulpwood in the southeast.
Appearance
Usually, the Virginia Pine tree is usually small or medium in size. It can reach heights of seventy meters and eventually grows itself a flat, top sparse crown. The trunk almost always has dead, grey branch stubs that are angled sharply upwards.
This tree is evergreen so the leaves are present all year around in the form of needles that are round three inches long. They are yellow green in colour, twisted, and slight divergent towards the stem. The twigs are slender, and change colour from green when they are young to purple green later on. The buds are gray brown in colour. The bark is scaly and orange brown in young trees. As the tree gets older the trunk develops small, thin, scaly plates and the upper parts often have cinnamon coloured patches on it.
Flowers and fruits
The Virginia Pine is monoecious, so both male and female flowers are on the same tree. The male flowers are yellow and cylindrical and found near the tip of the branch. The female flowers vary from red to yellow and have curved prickles on them.
The fruit is in the form of a conical cone, with reddish brown scales. They mature in the fall. This pine is wind-pollinated and practices cross-fertilisation although self fertilisation is also an option. Seed dispersal usually begins around October and is finished after three months, even though some seeds may be released until the next spring.
Care Tips
The seedlings of this tree need the most care, rather than the adult tree. They need full, direct sunlight for the best growth. Even having partial shade reduces their growth, and full shade will kill the seedlings. The seedlings are somewhat tolerant of low moisture in the soil that most other species of pines. While they do well on low moisture soil, their growth is slower if grown on dry sites.
Young trees are especially vulnerable to fire as they have a very thin bark and lack long-lived dormant buds towards the base, in the crown and along the bole.
Of all the southern conifers, the Virginia Pine is the one more used as a Christmas tree. If trees with the right nutritional growth and desirable traits are chosen, marketable trees are sold as Christmas trees and are produced in as little as three years time. The usual rotation for this pine tree is around five to ten years.
The wood of older pine trees is often softened due to fungal decay; these trees provide woodpeckers with good nesting habitats. Old decayed trees are therefore left near the margins of clear cuts or deforested lands to give the animals a chance at making a new home for them.
The Pine Tree State
Also called the Pinus taeda or North Carolina Pine, the Loblolly Pine is one of the many pines that originated from the American South, and is particularly abundant in eastern North Carolina. There are huge expanses of these trees in the state, whereas in most other forests they fade into the background in the presence of other species of trees. It is one of the varieties of the Southern Yellow Pine. Some other old names for the Loblolly Pine are Bull Pine, Oldfield Pine and Rosemary Pine.
Appearance
These Loblolly Pine trees can grow to reach heights of one hundred and fifteen feet and diameters of 2 meters.
Exceptional specimens can reach one hundred and fifty feet in height. The needles of this tree come in bundles of three and are sometimes twisted and quite long. They are shorter than those of the Southern Yellow Pine but longer than those found on other pine species. The cones are green in colour but ripen to a light buff brown colour, and each scale has a sharp spine on it.
Although the word ‘loblolly' means ‘wet, low place', it doesn't imply that these trees can only be grown in such a habitat. These trees can grow well in clay soil that is acidic, which is exactly the type of soil that is found in most of the South, and as a result this tree is found often in large stands in rural areas.
The rate of growth of this tree is quite rapid, even in comparison to the other usually fast-growing species of Southern pines. It is commercially grown in several plantations, along with the rest of the Pine species.
The needles that make up the leaves of the Loblolly Pine generally last up to around two years before they all off, and this gives the tree its evergreen character. Some needles do fall off throughout the year due to many other reasons, such as damage by insects and animals, severe weather conditions, and drought periods, the majority of them manage to hang on until it is autumn and winter of the second year of their lives.
This pine is one of the most important and most cultivated timber species found in the southern United States. Because of its rapid growth rate in a wide variety of soil types, it is mainly planted to obtain its lumber and pulpwood. It has a resinous, yellow wood that serves well as lumber and pulp fibres.
It is used heavily in the manufacture of pulpwood, composite boards, plywood, furniture, cabinetry, pilings, boxes, crates, posts and pallets. It is also planted in order to help stabilize damaged, forested or eroded soils. It is sometimes used as an ornamental or shade tree, and also as bark mulch.
The Loblolly Pine offers food and cover for a wide range of forest wildlife. The white-tailed deer, fox squirrel, gray squirrel, wild turkey and bobwhite quail all make use of both mixed and pure loblolly stands for making their shelter. Red-cockaded woodpeckers use these trees for their nesting and for foraging habitat, along with a few other birds such as the pine warbler, Bachman's warbler and brown-headed nuthatch.
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