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El Moncayo, Tarazona. Zaragoza: Aragn (Espaa.) Cultivado.Familia: PINACEAEDistribucin: Se extiende por el W de de la regin mediterrnea, zonas atlnticas del S de Francia y Europa; ocupa casi toda la Pennsula Ibrica y en Aragn se cita de las reas silceas del Sistema Ibrico, donde parece ser introducido; en el Prepirineo oscense Jaca- se han observado individuos ms o menos asilvestrados.Observaciones: No resulta fcil saber qu poblaciones son naturales; las aragonesas probablemente procedan todas de antiguos cultivos. En las proximidades de masas forestales de repoblacin se encuentran, en ocasiones, ejemplares asilvestrados. Hbitat: Forma bosques puros o mixtos ocupando ambientes de robledal y carrascal.Preferencia edfica: Acidfila. Vive sobre suelos silceos, siendo ms frecuente en los rodenos de arenisca.Rango altitudinal: 700- 1500 m Floracin: Marzo - MayoFructificacin: Septiembre - OctubreForma Biolgica: Macrofanerfito perennifolio Extractado del Atlas de la Flora de Aragn (Herbario de Jaca)
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Family Pinaceae Pseudotsuga wilsoniana Hayata, 1915 (;)
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Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada
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San Diego, California, United States
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Cook, ACT, Australia
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Aungban, Shan State, Myanmar
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2010-10-10 Hungary, Nyugat-Dunntl - Western Transdanubia, county Vas (840 m AMSL).This place lies a short distance below rott-k - Geschriebenstein peak; the foreground is a more or less natural spruce-beech-fir forest - with Fagus sylvatica and spruce shown in the photo -, while in the background you can see spruce monoculture - Picea abies - older than the (now dismantled) Iron Curtain (trees at least 60-80 years old, many a hundred or more).Even though the Austrian border is not far you can only see Hungarian territory here.So while the forests on the Hungarian side of this mountain are more natural by magnitudes than those on the Austrian side there are still a few monocultures there.
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Barranco de las Almunias Zaragoza Fam. PINACEAEDistribucin: Regin mediterrnea y CW de Portugal; en la Pennsula Ibrica se da por la mitad E; en Aragn escasea en los Somontanos, alcanzando el Sobrarbe; se extiende por la Depresin y zonas cercanas del Sistema Ibrico, siendo ms raro hacia el W y el S.Biologa y fenologa Hbitat: Por su carcter termfilo se sita en reas bajas, no muy elevadas o en exposiciones protegidas, a menudo relegado a enclaves abruptos, muy secos y con notable erosin.Preferencia edfica: Basfila Coloniza todo tipo de sustratos calcreos, incluso los yesos, y tolera los suelos esquelticos, muy secos y poco permeables.Rango altitudinal:80- 860 ( 1120 ) mFenologa:Floracin Febrero - MayoFructificacin Septiembre - OctubreForma Biolgica: Macrofanerfito perennifolioExtractado del Atlas de la Flora de Aragn (Herbario de Jaca)
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Severna Park, Maryland, United States
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2013-01-12 Vienna, district III., Schweizergarten, cultivars - Excursion Fischer (198 msm Quadrant 7864/1).German name: Serbische FichteNot an uncommon cultivar in parks, those in Schweizergarten however are not as slim and gracile as they "should" be.
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Denver, Colorado, United States
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Abies religiosa (Kunth) Schltdl. & Cham. Familia: Pinaceae. rbol completo. De San Antonio Tenextepec, municipio de Perote, Veracruz. Fotografa de Roberto Castro-Corts/CITRO, bajo licencia: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA. Del proyecto Conociendo las plantas de mi localidad, rescatando especies en peligro:
reservaeleden.org/plantasloc/
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[]Pinus taiwanensis Hayata 1911 [Endemic in Taiwan] Pinaceae
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, Taiwan Province,
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Florida, United States
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Washington, District of Columbia, United States
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Cambridge, Vermont, United States
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Benmore, Scotland, United Kingdom
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Pequot Lakes MN, May 11 2007.
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Sub-Alpine Fir(Abies lasiocarpa) is easily Identified by its extremely narrow, spire like crown. They also have a very crisp, pungent smell. It is a general rule that the higher in elevation a tree grows, the narrower its crown. An obvious adaption to the higher snowfall at high elevation. And as its name implies, these trees only grow up high, usually above 7,500ft, to tree line(11,000ft).
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Hesteridning i Terelj Nasjonalpark.--Horse riding in Terelj National Park.
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Picea engelmannii Parry ex Engelm. var. engelmannii. Lower limbs of an Engelmann Spruce that had caught a fallen cone. Not a posed picture; as it was found. Please consider the tree debris behind and to the side as tinsel! Otherwise I suppose I should have removed it but at the time was just trying to capture exactly how it was.Cones are shorter than Blue Spruce, Picea pungens, and not as papery. This cone bothered me somewhat in terms of being representative of Engelmann's Spruce in terms of its size and bract characteristics. Based on the likely length of the leaves/needles (probably mostly around 2 cm), this cone is easily in the 8 to 10 cm (roughly 4", possibly a little longer) range which is unusually large (cones for this species are usually less than 6 cm, so well less than 3" long. Also the bracts on Engelmann's Spruce cones are often more entire and rounded rather than as above. However, they can also be erose as above, and the shape of the cone above is much more in the expected range compared to the more oblong to cylindric shape of a Blue Spruce cone. The two spruces commonly grow together (although I did not see any P. pungens at this particular spot) and in the same elevational ranges but supposedly do not hybridize.Young twigs have minute hairs whereas those of Blue Spruce are glabrous.Needles not a sharp as Blue Spruce and they tend to be more on the upper side of the twig whereas with Blue Spruce they are spread equally more or less around the twig. September 5, 2011, Wasatch Plateau, Huntington Canyon, Emery County, Utah, approx. 7,185 ft. elev. Most commonly found at 8,000 ft and above however often occurs between 6,500 and 8,000 ft. in Utah.