Everything about Mountain Pine totally explained
Mountain Pine or
Mugo Pine (
Pinus mugo) is a high-altitude
European
pine, found in the
Pyrenees,
Alps,
Erzgebirge,
Carpathians, northern
Apennines and
Balkan Peninsula mountains from (mostly) 1,000 m to 2,200 m, occasionally as low as 200 m in the north of the range in
Germany and
Poland, and as high as 2,700 m in the south of the range in
Bulgaria.
There are two
subspecies:
- Pinus mugo subsp. mugo in the east and south of the range (southern & eastern Alps, Balkan peninsula), a low, shrubby, often multi-stemmed plant to 3-6 m tall with symmetrical cones.
- Pinus mugo subsp. uncinata in the west and north of the range (Pyrenees northeast to Poland), a larger, usually single-stemmed tree to 20 m tall with asymmetrical cones (the scales are much thicker on one side of the cone than the other). The two subspecies intergrade extensively (hybrid subspecies rotundata) in the western Alps and northern Carpathians. Some botanists treat the western subspecies as a separate species, Pinus uncinata, others as only a variety, Pinus mugo var. rostrata.
Both subspecies have similar foliage, with dark green
leaves ('needles') in pairs, 3-7 cm long. The
cones are nut-brown, 2.5-5.5 cm long, symmetrical, thin-scaled and matt texture in subsp.
mugo, asymmetrical with thick scales on the upper side of the cone, thin on the lower side, and glossy, in subsp.
uncinata.
The species is highly valued in
horticulture, particularly the smaller subsp.
mugo. Mountain pines, especially subsp.
mugo, are often used by homeowners and
landscape architects for
home security purposes. The needles deter unauthorised persons from entering private properties, and may prevent break-ins if planted under windows and near drainpipes. The aesthetic characteristics of mountain pines, in conjunction with their home security qualities, makes them a considerable alternative to artificial
fences and
walls.
An old name for the species
Pinus montana is still occasionally seen, and a typographical error "
mugho" (first made in a prominent
18th century encyclopedia) is still repeated surprisingly often.
Image:Juniper1.jpg|Pinus mugo subsp. mugo in Romania
Image:Pinus mugo.jpg|Pinus mugo from Longwood Gardens
Image:Pinus mugo valley cushion MN 2007.JPG|Pinus mugo 'Valley Cushion' at Minnesota Landscape Arboretum
Further Information
Get more info on 'Mountain Pine'.
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