Black Pine
The
Pinus Banksiana is commonly known as
Banks Pine,
Banksian Pine,
Black Pine,
Gray Pine,
Hudson Bay Pine,
Jack Pine,
Northern Scrub Pine,
Princess Pine, as well as
Scrub Pine< Go BackGrowing Regions
Jack pine occurs in Canada and in the north-central and northeastern
United States. The northern boundary of its range extends east from the
Mackenzie River in the Northwest Territories to Cape Breton Island, Nova
Scotia. Its range extends southwest from Nova Scotia to Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, northern New York, Michigan, extreme northwestern
Indiana, and northeastern Illinois, and northwest through Wisconsin and
Minnesota to Manitoba, Saskatchewan, central Alberta, and extreme
northeastern British Colombia [
48]. Jack pine has been planted outside
its native range in the Central States and in Alaska.
General Information
The currently accepted scientific name of jack pine is Pinus banksiana
Lamb. [
48]. A rarely described shrubby form, P. b. forma procumbens
Rouseau, occurs in Quebec and Nova Scotia on rocky headlands [
64].
Jack pine hybridizes with Rocky Mountain lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta
var. latifolia) where their ranges overlap in central and northwestern
Alberta and in scattered locations in Saskatchewan. The hybrid is P. X
murraybanksiana Righter & Stockwell [
48].
Jack pine is a dominant tree in the southern boreal forest region.
Associates are almost always subdominant except for aspen (Populus
spp.), paper birch (Betula papyrifera), and red pine (Pinus resinosa)
which may be codominant [34].
The following published classifications list jack pine as dominant or
codominant:
The vegetation of Alberta [57]
Field guide to forest ecosystems of west-central Alberta [28]
Virgin plant communities of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area [59]
Plant communities of Voyageurs National Park, Minnesota, U.S.A. [46]
The principal plant associations of the Saint Lawrence Valley [32]
The vegetation of Wisconsin [31]
Classification and ordination of southern boreal forests from the
Hondo-Slave Lake area of central Alberta [47]
Jack pine-lichen woodland on sandy soils in northern Saskatchewan and
northeastern Alberta [16]
Much of the information presented here is attributed to:
Carey, Jennifer H. 1993. Pinus banksiana. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online].
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,
Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available at USDA Forest Service.
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