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Lodgepole Pine (Pinus contorta) is a common tree in western North America.[2] Like all pines, it is evergreen. There are three subspecies, one of them with two varieties. All the four taxa are sometimes treated at the rank of variety[3][4].
This tree can be 30–40 m tall, but is often much smaller, particularly subsp. contorta, while subsp. murrayana can be larger, to 50 m. The leaves are needle-like, paired and often twisted, and 3–7 cm long. The 3–7 cm cones often need exposure to high temperatures (such as from forest fires) in order to open and release their seeds, though in subsp. murrayana they open as soon as they are mature. The cones have prickles on the scales. Lodgepole pine is named for its common use in the American Indian tepee lodge. A typical tepee is constructed with 15-18 lodgepole pines. The long, straight, and lightweight characteristics of the species made it ideal for horse transport in nomadic buffalo hunting cultures. Tribes made long journeys across the plains to secure lodgepole pines that only grew in mountainous areas. In Minnesota, other species such as red pine would be used in tepees, though they were generally thicker, heavier, and more cumbersone to transport than lodgepole pine. Many people still use lodgepole pine today for erecting tepees at private homes, on Indian Reservations, or powwows. The pines may be harvested for tepee poles on National Forests, provided the harvester secures a permit to cut lives trees for ceremonial or traditional purposes. The Bighorn Mountains, the Black Hills, and the Snowy Range of Wyoming are popular tepee pole harvesting areas for tepee enthusiasts and American Indians living on plains reservations in North and South Dakota. It is occasionally known under several English names: Black Pine, Scrub Pine, and Coast Pine. The species name contorta arises from the twisted, bent pines found in the coastal area. Lodgepole Pine is the Provincial tree of Alberta, Canada. Lodgepole Pine will hybridise with the closely related Jack Pine. Pinus contorta is a serious invasive plant in New Zealand. The species has also been planted extensively in Norway and Sweden for use in forestry. Pollen cones in Mount San Antonio. Pinus contorta subsp. latifolia, near Mount Baker, Washington. [edit] References
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Categories: IUCN Red List least concern species | Trees of California | Trees of Montana | Provincial symbols of Alberta | Trees of Alberta | Trees of Saskatchewan | Trees of Oregon | Trees of Washington (U.S. state) | Trees of Idaho | Trees of the Northwestern United States | Trees of mild maritime climate | Pinus | Least concern plants | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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