The Table Mountain Pine, Pinus pungens is a small to mid sized scruffy looking tree that reaches heights of only 50 feet tall. It has an irregularly shaped crown that is filled with twisted limbs and clusters of barbed cones. The Table Mountain Pine can generally be found growing above 2500 feet in elevation in only the southern mountains and other higher elevations of the piedmont from New York in the north to Georgia in the south.
Image Citation: Chris Evans, University of Illinois, Bugwood.org
The bark of the Table Mountain Pine is red brown and furrowed into moderately thin, rounded to flat scaled plates on the lower portion and rough to the touch. The leaves are in the form of evergreen needles are 1.5 to 3 inches long and grow in bundles of 2 each. Needles are dark green in color, thick and stiff sometimes twisting. Cones are the easiest way to identify this particular tree, they are short and fat with thick, sharp hooked barbs on the scale ends that resemble a mini - rhinoceros horn. When viewing a cone from the tip down, there is a visible spiraling pattern. Some cones are so tightly closed that only the heat from fire is able to open them to release their winged seeds.
Image Citation: Chris Evans, University of Illinois, Bugwood.org
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