Conifer Rarity in Southern California

Work occasioned a trip to southern California which, of course, also required me to spend some time with a few regionally endemic conifers. I had never visited the Torrey pine or Cuyamaca cypress, so in planning the trip to Palm Springs for a conference, Allison and I took a few extra days—looping south toward the Mexican border—to see North America's rarest pine and cypress.

Torry Pine (Pinus torreyana)

Rarity is a new endeavor for the Torrey pine. Though it is the current record-holder for "rarest North American pine" it has not always been that way. It is an ancient pine, whose lineage (or at least that of a near ancestor) extends back as far as the Oligocene or Miocene with a range that extended as far north as Oregon (Kral 1993). In the Pleistocene, the species probably ranged throughout the coastal basins of Southern California but became restricted to coastal San Diego County and Santa Rosa Island over the last 12,000 years or so, during Holocene warming (Waters and Schaal 1991). Its closest extant relative is probably the Coulter pine (Pinus coulteri).

Windswept Torrey pines
Charismatic specimens are sculpted by the pervasive wind, fed by moist coastal fog, and nourished by the sandstone on which they root.

Southern California coastal pine forest
Torrey Pines State Reserve protects the last remaining coastal pine forest in southern California.


Torrey pine seed cone
Seed cones are as long as they are wide (averaging 4"x4") and have scales with exceptionally thick tips.

Torrey pine branch buttressing
Due to wind, branch-buttressing creates exceptional bulbous arching—with the girth of these
upper regions surpassing that of both the main trunk and of my beautiful pregnant wife.


5-needle Torrey pine.
Greyish-green with 5-needles per bundle.

Where pines meet suburbs
In the early 1900's Guy Fleming and Ellen Browning Scripps helped protect this unique pine forest from development.

Cuyamaca cypress (Cupressus stephensonii)

The rarest cypresses in North America is found in only in the headwaters of King Creek, on the southwest slopes of Cuyamaca Peak in San Diego County. Some consider it a subspecies of the Arizona cypress (Cupressus arizonica).

Cupressus stephensonii below Cuyamaca Peak
Chaparral and cypresses rejuvenated—nine years after the Cedar Fire of 2003.

Smooth bark on an older Cuyamaca cypress
Mature bark is thin, cherry-red, smooth, and exfoliating.

Pinus coulteri and Cupressus stephensonii
Coulter pine (Pinus coulteri) and Cuyamaca cypress return in the fire-prone chaparral.

On the southwest slopes below Cuyamaca Peak.
Though suffering 70% mortality with the Ceder Fire of 2003, in March 2012 the remaining trees were locally abundant and covered in a cone crop reflecting several (consecutive?) cone-masting years.

Citations:
  1. Kral, R. 1993. Flora of North America Editorial Committee (eds.): Flora of North America North of Mexico, Vol. 2. Oxford University Press.
  2. Waters, E.R. and B.A. Schaal 1991. No variation is detected in the chloroplast genome of Pinus torreyana. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 21: 1832-1835.
  • Special thanks to Christopher Earle and his website, the Gymnosperm Database. Conifer information is always accessible thanks to his hard work.

 

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