Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Longleaf pine

Pinus palustris

Description:

Longleaf pine trees grow for 100-150 years before they reach full size and they can live as long as 500 years. Their extremely long needles give the young trees the look of a spike with grass growing out of it. At the tops of trees, the long, fanned out needles paint a pretty picture when silhouetted against the sky, even on overcast and dull days.Unfortunately, the longleaf pine forests have dwindled in size as a result of logging and this has contributed to the endangerment of a unique bird – the red-cockaded woodpecker.The woodpeckers peck out their nest cavities in such a way that the tree releases resin around the nest hole and you will see trees that are covered with long thick strands of resin coming down from nests. To help preserve the woodpeckers, wildlife management areas help protect nest holes against other woodpeckers.

Habitat:

Santee Coastal Reserve Wildlife Management Area

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

1 Comment

maplemoth662
maplemoth662 6 years ago

Photo No. 1: is a beautiful, forest photo....

Maria dB
Spotted by
Maria dB

South Carolina, USA

Spotted on Jan 18, 2015
Submitted on Jan 31, 2015

Related Spottings

Eastern white pine Pinus Tree... Stone Pine Red Pine

Nearby Spottings

butterfly Dragonfly Spider Great Blue Skimmer

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team