|
Eastern White Pine - Pinus
strobus
General information:
Eastern White Pine has soft blue-green 3 to 5 inches long
needles borne in groups of five although foliage color varies
greatly from one tree to the next. It is the only five-needle
pine native to the eastern part of North America and is the state
tree of Maine and Missouri. Some specimens keep the bluish color
throughout the winter, others loose it. Although it can grow
100 to 120 feet tall with a three to five-foot-diameter trunk
and spread 50 to 60 feet, it is typically seen from 50 to 80
feet tall in landscapes. Growth is very rapid at first but slows
down with age. Several branches on young trees normally originate
from the same point on the trunk forming a tree appearing to
be built of layers of foliage. Although young trees are pyramidal
and usually grow with one central leader, the layers (or whorls)
of horizontal branches give White Pine a distinctive appearance
in middle and old age. The gray bark on the trunk and large branches
remains unusually smooth through middle age, breaking up into
elongated blocks in old age. The flowers, male and female, occur
separately as small cones on the same tree. The cones are slender
and thornless, 4 to 8 inches long, and tapering.
Family:
Pinaceae
Lighting:
Full sun.
Temperature:
Zone 3B through 7.
Watering:
No information available.
Feeding
Simon and Schuster's recommends feeding 5-needle pines once a
month from early to late spring and from end of summer to late
autumn with a slow-acting organic fertilizer, and applying chelated
iron 2-3 times per year.
If you prefer to use chemical fertilizers,
feed every other week during the same times with a half-strength
solution of a fertilizer for acid-loving plants, such as Miracid.
You may wish to alternate with a balanced fertilizer such as
Peter's 20-20-20 depending on the acidity of your soil mix.
Pruning and wiring The root system should be pruned gradually in
the coarse of repotting, so as to always leave a strong root
system. Branch pruning and wiring should be done in late autumn,
and the wire left on the tree for 6-8 months at most. Pinch new
shoots in spring to 1/3 of their length.
Conventional wisdom indicates that the
needles of Pinus strobus do not reduce well, making it suitable
mainly for larger bonsai.
Every 1-2 years it is possible to remove
all of the new shoots in late spring, if the tree is healthy
and well-fed. This will result in buds forming in the fall at
the sites where the shoots were removed. The reason this might
be done is to form very short internodes on the branches.
Propagation:
Seed.
Repotting Repot every 2 or 3 years for young trees (up to
10 years) or every 3 to 5 years for older trees. Repotting can
be done in spring before the candles open or in late summer or
early autumn, after the heat of summer has passed. These are
the two periods of greatest root growth in pines.
Because of the rugged quality of the five-needle
pine, a strong rectangular pot should be used. Pines need a deep
root system, and five-needle pines especially need a deep pot
to avoid uprooting by wind, due to their dense foliage. Simon
and Schuster's recommends 50% soil, 10% peat, and 40% coarse
sand. Rémy Samson recommends 1 part leaf mould, 1 part
loam, and 1 part coarse sand. Peter Chan recommends 3 parts coarse
sand, 1 part peat, and 1 part loam.
Pines and other conifers grow in association
with a symbiotic fungus which grows in the root ball of the tree.
If this fungus is not present, the tree may die. For this reason,
pines and other conifers should never be bare-rooted, unless
steps are taken to re-introduce the fungus to the repotted plant,
such as making a slurry (thin mud) of the old soil and pouring
it over the newly potted soil.
Some experts feel that it is more important
to be sure that the tree always has a healthy root system with
sufficient feeder roots than to worry about symbiotic fungi.
They feel that trees are more likely to die from having their
root systems reduced too much at once than from not having the
fungus present. Certainly it is good advice in any case to be
sure the tree has sufficient roots.
Pests and diseases: Pests: White Pine
weevil is probably the biggest problem. The larvae of White Pine
weevils feed on the sapwood of the leaders and this is devastating
to the tree. The leader is killed and the many shoots replacing
it form a bushy head. First symptoms are pearl white drops of
resin on the leaders. The leaders die when the shoot is girdled
as adults emerge in summer.
Some adelgids will appear as white cottony
growths on the bark. All types produce honeydew which may support
sooty mold. European Pine shoot moth causes young shoots to fall
over. Infested shoots may exude resin. The insects can be found
in the shoots during spring.
Bark beetles bore into trunks making small
holes scattered up and down the trunk. Stressed trees are more
susceptible to attack. The holes look like shotholes. Keep trees
healthy.
Sawfly larvae caterpillars are variously
colored but generally feed in groups on the needles. Some sawfly
larvae will flex or rear back in unison when disturbed. Sawflies
can cause rapid defoliation of branches if left unchecked.
Pine needle miner larvae feed inside needles
causing them to turn yellow and dry up. Pine needle scale is
a white, elongated scale found on the needles. Pine tortoise
scale is brown and found on twigs. Depending on the scale, horticultural
oil may control overwintering stages.
Pine spittle bug lives and hides in a foamy
mass.
Spruce mites cause damage to older needles,
and are usually active in the spring and fall. Mites cause older
needles to become yellowed or stippled.
Zimmerman Pine moth larvae bore into the
trunk. The only outward symptoms may be death of parts of the
tree or masses of hardened pitch on the branches.
Diseases:
Procerva root rot kills many White Pines planted off site. Avoid
planting in dry sites and clay or alkaline soil.
White Pine blister rust attacks White Pine
and uses currant as an alternate host. European Black Currant,
the favored alternate host, may be banned from certain areas.
Other Currants, particularly Red Currant should not be grown
within 300 feet of Pines. Infected branches may be pruned off.
Be sure to select White Pine trees certified to be rust-resistant.
Canker diseases may rarely cause dieback
of landscape Pines. Keep trees healthy and prune out the infected
branches.
Needle cast is common on small trees and
plantation or forest trees. Infected needles yellow and fall
off.
White Pine decline is used to describe
the slow decline of trees planted in dry, clay soils low in organic
matter. Plants with this disorder have only a small cluster of
needles at the ends of the branches.
Bibliography:
"Trees of the Eastern United
States and Canada" by WilliamM. Harlow, McGraw Hill, 1942.
USDA Fact Sheet ST-473
Compiled by Sabrina Caine
Edited by Thomas L. Zane
Return to: Index by Botanical
Name or Index by Common Name
|