-
Nigde, Turkey
-
West Virginia, United States
-
West Virginia, United States
-
-
2011-02-05 Lower Austria, district Bruck/Leitha - Hundsheimer Berge (335 m AMSL).The extreme conditions of rocky Braunsberg heath created this dwarfism - usually, Scots Pine is a huge tree, but here in this dry, rocky and extremely windy place it does not grow bigger than an ordinary Pinus mugo - and this at such low altitude (only ~335 metres AMSL!).German name: Rot-Fhre
-
2011-02-05 Lower Austria, district Bruck/Leitha - Hundsheimer Berge (335 m AMSL).Boughs, bark.German name: Rot-Fhre
-
2010.04.09 Lower Austria, district Neunkirchen, Rax northern flank/Wachthttlkamm (~1080 m AMSL).Twigs and needles of Scots pine: not only is the bark red (as opposed to black bark of P. nigra) but needles are also a great deal shorter - this usually is even obvious from a distance.German name: Rot-Fhre (-Kiefer)
-
Kolari, Lapland, Finland
-
2011-02-05 Lower Austria, district Bruck/Leitha - Hundsheimer Berge (335 m AMSL).Cone; leaves (needles).German name: Rot-Fhre
-
Herbarium Blackwellianum emendatum et auctum, id est, Elisabethae Blackwell collectio stirpium.Norimbergae : Typis Io. Iosephi Fleischmanni, 1750-1773..
biodiversitylibrary.org/page/291523
-
2010-11-13 Burgenland, district Gssing (mixed beech-pine-marron forest, 310 m AMSL).Bark on the crown of a felled tree: typical reddish-brown colour.German name: Rot-Fhre
-
2010.04.09 Lower Austria, district Neunkirchen, Rax northern flank/Wachthttlkamm (~1070 m AMSL).Typical habitus of Scots pines: rather forming a cone than the irregular shape typical for Pinus nigra.German name: Rot-Fhre (-Kiefer)
-
2011-02-05 Lower Austria, district Bruck/Leitha - Hundsheimer Berge (335 m AMSL).Boughs, bark, leaves (needles).German name: Rot-Fhre
-
Kroatisch Ehrensdorf, Burgenland, Austria
-
2011-02-05 Lower Austria, district Bruck/Leitha - Hundsheimer Berge (335 m AMSL).Cone.German name: Rot-Fhre
-
Zemoji Panemune, Marijampole County, Lithuania
-
-
2011-02-06 Vienna XXII. district (Lobau national park 155 m AMSL).Pines aren't native to Lobau (or very marginally at most); they've been planted on some of the dryer places - and they still remain there. Mostly however you see P. nigra; this occurrence of P. sylvestris is a rarer one.German name: Rot-Fhre
-
-
Washington, District of Columbia, United States
-
Zemoji Panemune, Marijampole County, Lithuania
-
Ridge, England, United Kingdom
-
2010.04.09 Lower Austria, district Neunkirchen, Rax northern flank/Wachthttlkamm (~1080 m AMSL).In this habitat black and Scots pine grow next to each other (which one doesn't see too often in natural habitats, usually only one or the other is present).Here you can compare excellently habitus of both species: P. sylvestris forming more or less a cone while P. nigra does not form a shape with a sharp "peak" but rather has a "flat roof", so to speak; also typically P. nigra twigs form "storey-like" layers of branches which often are almost in right angles to the stem - and which you usually don't see with P. sylvestris.
-
Kinlochewe, Scotland, United Kingdom