photograph
Tree [Li Xiang-Wang] (2).

photograph

Bark (plus P. yunnanensis behind) [Li Xiang-Wang] (2).

photograph

Shoot with cones [Li Xiang-Wang] (2).
Pinus squamata Li 1992

Common Names

Qiaojia song (3).

Taxonomic notes

Joins P. bungeana and P. gerardiana in subsection Gerardianae, having similar bark, but differing in slender leaves in fascicles of 4-5 and cones with small seeds and long seedwings (1). It also shows some similarities to the rare Mexican endemic Pinus rzedowskii and some of the piņon pines.

Description

A fast-growing, straight-stemmed slender conic tree to at least 15-20 m (mature height unknown) with smooth off-white bark closely similar to that of P. bungeana. Branches pale grey, smooth. Shoots greenish-brown, smooth. Leaves superficially resembling Pinus armandii, drooping, 4-5 per fascicle, 9-17 cm long, slender, 0.8 mm wide, glossy green on dorsal face, white stomatal lines on inner faces (1, 2); sheath mostly deciduous but smallest sheath scales moderately persistent (2; as in Pinus rzedowskii and P. maximartinezii). Cones similar to P. rzedowskii and P. balfouriana, 9+ cm long, 3-4 cm broad (closed), on a 1 cm stalk, green ripening red-brown, scales with a flat to slightly raised apophysis and a dorsal umbo (1, 2), umbo 'unarmed' (1) but actually with a small c. 1 mm mucro much as in Pinus balfouriana (2); seeds small, c. 4-5 mm, with a 16 mm articulate wing (1).

Range

China: Qiaojia Xian, N Yunnan, at about 2200 m elevation (1).

Big Tree

Oldest

Dendrochronology

Ethnobotany

Observations

Remarks

Discovered April 1991 by Pangzhao J. Q. ; studied September 1991 and described 1992 by Li Xiang-Wang (1). A highly distinct species. It is unlikely to be very hardy, estimated probably USDA Zone 9, perhaps Zone 8.

The species is critically endangered. Only about 20 trees are known (1). Those shown here are young, perhaps about 30 years old, mixed with Pinus yunnanensis in a habitat which appears to comprise open scattered degraded secondary woodland, scrub and grassland. The widely-spaced branch whorls suggest that these trees are as yet far from mature and could become markedly larger, possibly reaching heights over 30 m eventually.

Citations

(1) Li Xiang-Wang. 1992. A new series and a new species of Pinus from Yunnan. Acta Botanica Yunnanica 14: 259-260.
(2) Photographs courtesy Li Xiang-Wang, Forestry Dept., Southwest Forestry College, Kunming, Yunnan, in collection of M. P. Frankis.
(3) Richardson & Rundel 1998.
(4) Price et al. 1998.

Page text prepared by M.P. Frankis, Dec-1998.


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This page is from the Gymnosperm Database
URL: http://www.geocities.com/~earlecj/pi/pin/squam.htm
Edited by Christopher J. Earle
E-mail:earlecj@earthlink.com
Last modified on 7-Apr-1999

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