Bristlecone pine

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Bristlecone pines
Image:Prometheus Wheeler.jpg
A Great Basin Bristlecone Pine forest
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Pinales
Family: Pinaceae
Genus: Pinus
Subgenus: Ducampopinus
Section: Balfourianae
Species

Pinus aristata
Pinus longaeva
Pinus balfouriana

Image:Bristlecone pine closeup.jpg
Gnarled bristlecone pine wood

The bristlecone pines are a small group of pine trees (Family Pinaceae, genus Pinus, subsection Balfourianae) that can reach an age far greater than that of any other single living organism known, up to nearly 5,000 years.

There are three closely related species of bristlecone pine:

Image:Bristlecone Wheeler.JPG
This one might have died hundreds of years ago, but still stands. Its wood gives clues to scientists who read the rings to compare to rings of living trees, making a 10,000 year-long record.

Bristlecone pines grow in isolated groves at and just below the tree line. Because of cold temperatures, dry soils, high winds, and short growing seasons, the trees grow very slowly. The wood is very dense and resinous, and thus resistant to invasion by insects, fungi, and other potential pests. As the tree ages, much of its vascular cambium layer may die. In very old specimens, often only a narrow strip of living tissue connects the roots to a handful of live branches.

Contents

[edit] Oldest living organisms

The oldest single living organisms known are bristlecone pines, though some plants such as creosote bush or aspen form clonal colonies that may be many times older. The existing growth in clonal colonies sprang as shoots from older growth so there is an unbroken chain of life that sometimes dates back several tens of thousands of years. However, the original ancient growth in these colonies is long dead. The oldest bristlecone pines are single plants that have been alive for a little less than 5,000 years. These very old trees are of great importance in dendrochronology or tree-ring dating.

Methuselah

Currently, the oldest (acknowledged) living organism known is a bristlecone pine tree nicknamed "Methuselah" (after Methuselah, the longest-lived person in the Bible), located in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest in the White Mountains of eastern California, and measured by core samples to be 4,789 years old. The U.S. Forest Service does not reveal the actual position of "Methuselah" in the bristlecone grove, in order to protect the tree.[1]

Prometheus

Donald R. Currey, a student of the University of North Carolina, was taking core samples of bristlecones in 1964 when he discovered an exceedingly ancient tree dubbed "Prometheus". According to some, his coring tool broke, and the U.S. Forest service granted permission to Mr. Currey to cut down "Prometheus". After Prometheus had been felled, 4,844 rings were counted on a cross-section of the tree, making "Prometheus" at least 5,000 years old, since the rings were not counted at the base of the tree. This makes Prometheus the oldest non-clonal living thing known to man. The circumstances leading to the cutting of the tree remain controversial.[2]

The other two species, Pinus balfouriana and Pinus aristata are also long-lived, though not to the extreme extent of P. longaeva; specimens of both have been measured or estimated to be up to 3,000 years old. It is rumored that a specimen older than "Methuselah" has been discovered, but this has not been widely publicized.[1]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Bain, G. Donald (2001). Explore the Methuselah Grove. NOVA Online: Methuselah Tree. PBS.
  2. ^ Hall, Carl. "Staying Alive", San Francisco Chronicle, 1998-08-23. 

[edit] Further references

  • Bailey, D. K. 1970. Phytogeography and taxonomy of Pinus subsection Balfourianae. Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 57: 210-249.
  • Richardson, D. M. (ed.). 1998. Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 530 p. ISBN 0-521-55176-5.

[edit] External links

pl:Sosna oścista

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