Pinus quadrifolia Parry ex Parl.
Family: Pinaceae
Four-Leaf Pinyon,  more...
[Pinus juarezensis Lanner]
Pinus quadrifolia image
G.B. Sudworth  

Trees to 10m; trunk to 0.5m diam., straight, much branched; crown dense, becoming rounded. Bark red-brown, irregularly furrowed and cross-checked to irregularly rectangular, plates scaly. Branches spreading to ascending, persistent to trunk base; twigs slender, pale orange-brown, puberulent-glandular, aging brown to gray-brown. Buds ovoid, light red-brown, ca. 0.4--0.5cm, slightly resinous. Leaves (3--)4(--5) per fascicle, persisting 3--4 years, (2--)3--6cm ´ (1--)1.2--1.7mm, curved, connivent, stiff, green to blue-green, margins entire to minutely scaly-denticulate, finely serrulate, apex subulate, adaxial surfaces mostly strongly whitened with stomatal bands, abaxial surface not so but 2 subepidermal resin bands evident; sheath 0.5--0.6cm, scales soon recurved, forming rosette, shed early. Pollen cones ovoid, ca. 10mm, yellowish. Seed cones maturing in 2 years, shedding seeds and falling soon thereafter, spreading, symmetric, ovoid before opening, broadly ovoid to depressed-globose when open, (3--)4--8(--10)cm, pale yellow-brown, sessile to short-stalked, apophyses thickened, strongly raised, diamond-shaped, transversely keeled, umbo subcentral, low-pyramidal or sunken, blunt. Seeds obovoid, body ca. 15mm, brown, wingless.

Dry rocky sites; 1200--1800m; Calif.; Mexico in Baja California.

Pinus quadrifolia is the rarest pinyon in the flora. It hybridizes naturally with P . monophylla .

Pinus quadrifolia image
G.B. Sudworth  
Pinus quadrifolia image
PlantCollections  
Pinus quadrifolia image
PlantCollections  
Pinus quadrifolia image
Charles Webber  
Pinus quadrifolia image
Charles Webber  
Pinus quadrifolia image
J. E.(Jed) and Bonnie McClellan  
Pinus quadrifolia image
J. E.(Jed) and Bonnie McClellan