Your Guide to US States - SHG Resources: Profiles data, sorted by topics and US states such as state agencies, colleges, education, economy, government, history, media, symbols, statistics, facts, and figures.
FIND A SCHOOL NEAR YOU
>> Zip Code: Program:
Home  Agencies  Channels  Chat  Colleges & Universities  Columnists  Financial Services  Forums  Gemstones  Home Services  Local Venue  Money Auction  Movies Reviews  Newspapers  Personals  Radio Stations  Search  Site Guide  State Symbols  Television Stations  Traffic Center  Travel  US States
State History Guide

State Symbols: Official State Tree Designations of the 50 States.

State Trees

Trees, US 50

 

Symbols, US 50

 


Symbols

 

My Montana

 

 

Montana Symbols, Tree: Ponderosa Pine

 

eSylvan

Online Tutoring Programs

 

Request More Information

eSylvan's award-winning online tutoring is guaranteed to improve your child’s reading and math skills.  It will also boost their self-confidence. With personalized instruction from caring, state-certified teachers, learning at home is fun, easy, and effective.  Help your child today with this accredited, low-risk and affordable solution.

 

State Tree, a state symbol

Ponderosa Pine

(Pinaceae Pinus ponderosa)
Adopted in 1949.

Pinus ponderosa, Western Yellow Pine, Bull, Black Jack, Western Red, Sierra Brownbark, Heavy, Western Pitch, Ponderosa Pine. Montana's state tree has a long list of names. This stately western Montana resident has figured heavily in the development of all the West.

In what is now South Dakota, Lewis and Clark first observed the cones of the ponderosa pine which had floated that far on the currents of the Missouri River. Captain Lewis, particularly, took extensive notes on the tree as he passed through its habitat later during the journey west and back, but his untimely death in 1809 delayed any serious scientific study of the tree until the end of the 19th century.

Pioneers needed no detailed report to encourage their use of the pine's wood for the civilization they were building. Ponderosa timber served everywhere, from railroad ties and telegraph poles to mine bracing and homes. Only later did its long needles and attractive cones garner more scientific consideration.

In the spring of 1908, Helena's school children held a referendum on which tree best represented the state. The ponderosa easily outdistanced fir, larch, and cottonwood for the designation.


It was not until 1949, however, that the Montana Legislature bestowed its blessing. The Montana Federation of Garden Clubs carried on a year-long campaign on behalf of the ponderosa. The state forester supported it as the "most typical" of all Montana trees and the best commercial timber... "king of the forest," he called it. The Legislature agreed.

Montana's lumbermen have seconded the praise over the years, harvesting millions of board feet from public and private lands throughout the state. In a recent year, the value of ponderosa pine harvested from public land alone was more than four million dollars.

Today the tree may be found in most parts of western Montana. Its range includes the entire West, from the plains to the Pacific Coast. On the average the tree reaches maturity when 60 to 125 feet tall (about 150 years old) and approximately 20 to 30 inches in diameter. The largest ponderosa pine on record live along the humid Pacific coast, where California naturalist John Muir once measured a giant, 220 feet tall and eight feet in diameter.

The beauty and value of the ponderosa pine makes it truly representative of Montana and worthy of its designation as the state tree.
 

Ponderosa pines grow straight and tall, sometimes more than two hundred feet. Lewis and Clark first learned of the tree's existence when they found cones that had been washed down the Missouri River into the Dakotas

Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), also called western yellow pine, is one of the most widely distributed pines in western North America. A major source of timber, ponderosa pine forests are also important as wildlife habitat, for recreational use, and for esthetic values. Within its extensive range, two varieties of the species currently are recognized: Pinus ponderosa var. ponderosa (Pacific ponderosa pine) (typical) and var. scopulorum (Rocky Mountain ponderosa pine) (10). Arizona pine (P. arizonica), sometimes classified as a variety of ponderosa pine (12,36,51), is presently recognized as a separate species (45).

Leaf: Evergreen, 5 to 10 inches long, with three (sometimes 2) tough, yellow-green needles per fascicle. When crushed, needles have a turpentine odor sometimes reminiscent of citrus.

Flower: Monoecious; males yellow-red, cylindrical, in clusters near ends of branches; females reddish at branch tips.

Fruit: Cones are ovoid, 3 to 6 inches long, sessile, red-brown in color, armed with a slender prickle. Maturing August to September.

Twig: Stout, orange in color, turning black. Buds often covered with resin.

Bark: Very dark (nearly black) on young trees, developing cinnamon-colored plates and deep furrows.

Form: A large tree with an irregular crown, eventually developing a flat top or short conical crown. Ponderosa pine self-prunes well and develops a clear bole.

Kingdom Plantae -- Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants
  Superdivision   Spermatophyta -- Seed plants
     Division   Coniferophyta – Conifers
       Class   Pinopsida –
            Order Pinales –
               Family Pinaceae – Pine family
                  Genus Pinus L. – pine
                   Species Pinus ponderosa P.& C. Lawson – ponderosa pine

Source:
Dendrology at Virginia Tech
U.S. Department of Agriculture

 

 

 
Google

State Symbols

State Flag - Click for the history, official description, and picture of the state flag


Symbols Index

Bird

Flag

Seal

Almanac

Flower

Names

Tree

History

History Timeline


Elected Officials

 

The World Almanac for Kids Online!

 

National Forests


Beaverhead National Forest

Bitterroot National Forest

Custer National Forest

Deerlodge National Forest

Flathead National Forest

Gallatin National Forest

Helena National Forest

Kootenai National Forest

Lewis and Clark National Forest

Lolo National Forest

 

 

Profiles resources and data , sorted by topics and by US states

 

Directory About Partners: PR5  | PR5-1 | PR5-2  Policies Privacy Terms of Service

® Copyright 2008, SHG, LLC, All rights reserved,

Please report problems with this web site to the webmaster@shgresources.com