File:Pinus lambertiana (sugar pine) (38677256104).jpg

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Pinus lambertiana Douglas, 1827 - cone & seeds (nuts) from a sugar pine (public display, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA)

Plants are multicellular, photosynthesizing eucaryotes. Most species occupy terrestrial environments, but they also occur in freshwater and saltwater aquatic environments. The oldest known land plants in the fossil record are Ordovician to Silurian. Land plant body fossils are known in Silurian sedimentary rocks - they are small and simple plants (e.g., Cooksonia). Fossil root traces in paleosol horizons are known in the Ordovician. During the Devonian, the first trees and forests appeared. Earth's initial forestation event occurred during the Middle to Late Paleozoic. Earth's continents have been partly to mostly covered with forests ever since the Late Devonian. Occasional mass extinction events temporarily removed much of Earth's plant ecosystems - this occurred at the Permian-Triassic boundary (251 million years ago) and the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary (65 million years ago).

The most conspicuous group of living plants is the angiosperms, the flowering plants. They first unambiguously appeared in the fossil record during the Cretaceous. They quickly dominated Earth's terrestrial ecosystems, and have dominated ever since. This domination was due to the evolutionary success of flowers, which are structures that greatly aid angiosperm reproduction.

Shown above is a cone from a sugar pine. Pines are not angiosperms - they are gymnosperms. The sugar pine is the tallest pine tree species in the world and produces the longest pine cones. It is native to far-western America - principally the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California, but also northern California and parts of Oregon and Mexico.

The seeds from the cones of sugar pines are edible as "sugar pine nuts".

Classification: Plantae, Pinophyta, Pinopsida, Pinales, Pinaceae


More info. at:

<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinus_lambertiana" rel="nofollow">en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinus_lambertiana</a>
Date
Source Pinus lambertiana (sugar pine)
Author James St. John

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by James St. John at https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/38677256104 (archive). It was reviewed on 12 November 2019 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

12 November 2019

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current04:50, 12 November 2019Thumbnail for version as of 04:50, 12 November 20193,561 × 1,939 (5.74 MB)Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs)Transferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons

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