Category:Pinus sylvestris in the Atlantic region

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English: Scots Pine Pinus sylvestris in the Atlantic far west of Scotland and Ireland is thought to have survived glacial episodes on nunataks off the current west coast of Britain and Ireland. These trees are not known to be morphologically distinct, but are better adapted to oceanic climates than the species in the rest of its range, and differ in resin chemistry.
  • Forrest, G. I. 1980. Genotypic variation among native Scots Pine populations in Scotland based on monoterpene analysis. Forestry 53: 101-128.
  • Forrest, G. I. 1982. Relationship of some European Scots Pine populations to native Scottish woodlands based on monoterpene analysis. Forestry 55: 19-37.
  • Kinloch, B. B., Westfall, R. D. & Forrest, G. I. 1986. Caledonian Scots Pine: origins and genetic structure. New Phytologist 104: 703-729.
  • McGeever, A. H. & Mitchell, F. J. G. 2016. Re‐defining the natural range of Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris L.): a newly discovered microrefugium in western Ireland. Journal of Biogeography 43: 2199-2208.

Media in category "Pinus sylvestris in the Atlantic region"

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