Plant Image Data Base
Pinus
sylvestris
Scotch Pine or Scots Pine
(Pinaceae - Pine Family)
Form
- large evergreen specimen tree
- maturing at about 40' tall by 30' wide under urban conditions, but much
larger under optimum conditions or in its native habitat
- irregular pyramidal growth habit in early youth, but quickly becoming
flat-topped, scalloped, open, or irregular in shape by late youth and
throughout maturity
- medium growth rate when young, becoming slow with age
Culture
- full sun to partial shade
- prefers a moist, well-drained, acidic soil in full sun, but is adaptable
to a variety of poor soil, soil pH, and dry soil conditions
- propagated by seeds
- Pine Family, with several potential disease (Diplodia Tip Blight [also
known as Sphaeropsis]) and pest (Pine Sawfly Larvae, scale) problems that
normally do not manifest themselves
- abundantly available in ball and burlap form
- often sheared during nursery production (or Christmas tree production) for
a fuller, more dense, and uniformly upright appearance at transplanting
- great variability exists within the species as to upright versus sprawling
branching character, foliage color, and vigor
Foliage
- green to bluish-green needles occur as two per bundle, typically from
2" to 3" long, stiff and often distinctly twisting, and persisting
for about three years on the twigs
- needles often develop a chartreuse-brown cast during the Winter, but
recover their blue-green color in Spring
Flowers
- staminate flowers are yellowish and clustered as short catkins, while
pistillate flowers are green immature "cones", flowering during
April and May and often unnoticed
Fruits
- 2" brown cones are often present in noticeable quantity on mature
trees, but not ornamentally significant
Twigs
- green when young, becoming brown and rough by the second year, usually
twisting, very dense, and somewhat pendulous on the lower branches of mature
trees
Trunk
- fissured gray to red-brown bark occurs at the lower portions of the trunk,
but becomes bright orange and exfoliating on the upper half of the tree
(once the tree reaches about 15' in height or taller); rather ornamental and
a good identification feature for the species
ID Summary
- twisting blue-green pairs of needles to 3" long, an irregular or
scalloped crown by mid-age, and distinctly orange exfoliating bark on the
upper half of the trunk are distinguishing traits for this evergreen tree
Function
- used as a single specimen or in group plantings as a picturesque evergreen
tree for moderately stressful sites; otherwise found in mass plantings or as
a space-filler at wastelands and neglected sites
Texture
- medium texture in youth, but bold texture with age
- thick density
Assets
- vivid light-orange bark on the upper half of mature trees
- bluish-green twisted needles
- pyramidal growth habit in youth, becoming picturesque with an irregular to
scalloped crown with age
- popular and relatively inexpensive Christmas tree (cut trees sometimes
have their needles spray-painted blue to increase their sale ability)
- cold hardiness (to zones 2 or 3, depending upon selection)
Liabilities
- relatively slow growth rate with age (as compared to the youthful medium
rate)
- not at all symmetrical or uniformly shaped with age (it develops
"character")
- needles often turn a subtle chartreuse-brown in Winter, especially in
wind-exposed areas of the canopy
Habitat
- zones 2 (or 3) to 8
- native to large expanses of Europe and Asia (and hence the genetic
variability due to widely different seed sources)
Variants
- Pinus sylvestris 'Glauca Nana' (or 'Nana') - a small to
medium-sized shrub, slowly maturing at 5' tall by 6' wide, with distinctly
blue-green twisted needles having a hint of silver, and sometimes grafted
onto a standard
- Pinus sylvestris 'Watereri' - a compact, upright, pyramidal form
that is slow-growing, to about 12' tall and wide, with gray-blue needles
Purpose
- Scotch Pine is an evergreen tree that develops ornamental bark and a bold,
irregular character with age.
Summary
- Pinus sylvestris is a blue-green twisting-foliaged, medium- to
slow-growing, evergreen tree with orange bark on the upper half of its
mature trunks, having an upright pyramidal growth habit in youth that
becomes irregular with age, ideal for stressful or neglected areas, and also
a popular and relatively inexpensive Christmas tree.
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