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FDIC.
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Scott: Welcome to Common
Ground. I'm your host Scott Knudson. In this
episode due to popular demand Biologist
and Ecologist, Rob Knudson, my father,
returns to teach us how to identify the common
evergreens of Northern Minnesota.
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Rob: My name's Rob Knudson. I'm a
Biologist, Ecologist and a retired
teacher. And two years ago we did a program for Common
Ground where I helped you learn the
deciduous trees of North Central Minnesota. I tried to learn them by the
leaves and the bark. Today, we're going to do a follow up to that
program. Where we take the things that people normally call
pine trees, the conifers and sort them out.
If you'd like to review
the deciduous tree program. Just go to the link at the bottom
of the screen.
♪ Okay, today
we're going to take a look at the evergreens, what most people
call the pines. And we're going to learn to identify
them from the needles, from the trunks and from the shape
of the tree. It's not really correct to call these
trees pines. Because pines is simply one of the groups
that we have around here. We have other genuses. We have pines,
we have spruces, we have firs, we have
larches and we have cedars also. The best
term to use to describe these trees are conifers.
Now the word conifer is actually
Latin-Greek. Anytime you see the term
"ifera", "offera", "ifer" like conifer
"ifer" refers to the bearer of something. And obviously conifer
refers to the bearer of cones. Referring to the way
that these trees reproduce. These trees all
reproduce using cones instead of
flowers. ♪
Most deciduous trees that have fruit
reproduce with flowers and are pollinated by
insects. The smell
right here is just wonderful. These happen to be wild plums.
But the same thing is true of these
Nanking cherries and
pincherries and chokecherries and
crab apples.
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♪
In most of the species of
conifers, the trees that reproduce with cones, the
male pollen cones, which you can see here on this Jack Pine
and here on this Red Pine are
located at the bottom of the tree. So when the wind blows the pollen
from the male pollen cones, the female cones
which turn into the things we normally call pine cones are located
usually at the top of the tree. The pollen from
a tree does not pollinate the female
cones of the same tree. So we get cross pollination.
Cross pollination getting genetic
material from two parents. The advantage of cross
pollination is that insures that in the next generation
of pine trees there's going to be some variation.
If you have variation, if everybody's
a little bit different then you can have some of the trees
a little better suited to live where they do than the other
ones. And those are the ones live long enough to reproduce
and they pass on those genes to the next generation. And you have a
better adapted tree. That's why trees are
different from state to state. And even from
area to area within the same state. In the conifers,
it's actually at least a two year process
from the time that the pollen fertilizes the eggs
in the female cone. Until the cone actually
matures, dries out, opens up and sheds it's
seeds. So much of the culture we have in Northern Minnesota
revolves around our forests and our coniferous
trees. And it really is a lot more fun to be able to walk through the woods
and recognize what it is that you're looking at.
It's early May in Northern
Minnesota. And it'd be a great time to take a walk in the woods
and look at some of our common evergreens. We'll take a look
at the needles. We'll take a look at the bark. And we'll take a look at the general
shape of the tree for comparison purposes.
Let's start with one of the very common evergreens in
Northern Minnesota, the Red Pines. Also known as a Norway Pine.
It's real common growing wild in the
forest and in large plantations.
This is a nice stand of
approximately 50 year old Red Pine. Look at the color of the
bark. Look at the size of the needles and the
shape of the tree. These are Red Pines.
You can see how much this
tree grew every year when it was small.
When these branches were the topside
branches the top of the tree was right there.
When these branches were the
side branches this was the top of the tree. One years
growth. There's another year. There's another year.
And you can see it going up the tree.
You can tell the Red Pine again by the color of the bark.
♪
Here's the White Pine. Another real
common species of evergreen in Northern Minnesota.
Known for it's beautiful white wood used for paneling and
other construction.
Here's a real good example of the typical
profile of a White Pine.
Okay here's the needles on the branch of a White Pine.
The one pine that you may confuse this one
with is the Red Pine but
the White Pine has very very soft needles as
compared to the Red Pine which are much stiffer and they're
bigger. If you wanted to get technical about it the White Pine
the needles occur in bunches of five.
Whereas on the Red Pine there's only two.
The White Pine needles are also significantly smaller than
Red Pine needles. Which are the biggest needles we have on any pine.
White Pines also have the biggest
cones of any of the conifers that we have in Northern
Minnesota - six, eight inches long at least.
The seeds have fallen out of these cones,
last fall probably. This is a White
Pine. Here's a White Pine and you can see
as you look up the trunk how much
that White Pine grew each year by the position of the
nodes. Where the branches come out. That top one
you can see that it grew almost 3 feet in one year.
This is a White Pine.
♪
Here's an
example of one of the things that can happen to a White Pine here in
Northern Minnesota. Two years ago
this tree was almost completely stripped of its bark
by a porcupine. And if
you look you can see that the pine tree has
secreted a whole bunch of sap trying to cover up its wounds but
this one's so substantially stripped that
I'm pretty sure this one will be dead in the next year or two.
♪
♪
Here is a great comparison
of a mature White Pine on the right
and a mature Red Pine on the left.
Note the difference in the bark.
♪
This rather
ragged looking conifer is another one of the pines.
This one you can see is not
tall and straight like a Red Pine. Pretty typical.
One of the most common trees that we have in Northern Minnesota. You might
notice that it's needles are
shorter than either a Red Pine or a White Pine.
This is in fact a pine, this is Jack Pine.
The tree itself can be just about any shape.
And this is a very typical looking Jack Pine tree. You can
see the bark is just kind of a rough
bark. But this is what they look like. This is Jack
Pine. One of the most common trees of Northern Minnesota.
On this Jack Pine you can see on these lower
branches you can see the pollen
cones that are starting to form. In another month or so these will be
releasing gobs and gobs and gobs of pollen.
And then way up at the top of the tree
you'll see where most of the seed cones are
located. This is a Jack Pine.
Okay, right
here, this lowest branch that we see is a Jack
Pine. Take a note of the length of
the needles, and the color and the shape of the branches. Look
right above it. Right above it you have a
tree that looks kind of like a Jack Pine but
the needles are longer and a little bit more of a
blue green color than a dark green color. That tree right
there occurs around Northern Minnesota mostly
in plantations. That is what most people
call a Scotch Pine.
Technically the proper name for it is a Scots
Pine. And it was imported from Europe and it's planted in
plantations. But we happen to have one right here. It's easily confused
with Jack Pine. The Jack Pine has shorter needles and they're
darker green. Scots Pine has longer needles and
not as long as White Pine or Red Pine, but
longer than a Jack Pine. Ok, here's a good comparison
between an Eastern White Pine and a Scots Pine.
We compared it to Jack Pine already. The Scots Pine has shorter
needles, thicker needles than the White Pine.
And they're a little bit more of a bluish tinge to them than the White Pine.
You can see the White Pine has much finer needles and they're
greener than the Scots Pine.
Here we have the most common
spruce in Northern Minnesota. The northern
White Spruce. Check out the nice
conical shape which is an adaptation for shedding snow.
Here's a great example
of a probably 100+
year old White Spruce tree. Totally
mature with a nice White Pine in the background for comparison.
Okay, this is White
Spruce. I want you to note
how much variation there can be from one tree to
another. This is White Spruce. This is also White
Spruce. Look at how much longer the needles are on this one
than that one. How much more blue they are on this one
than this one. These are kind of the extremes. This one
has shorter needles. This one has longer. They're both
pokey. It all has to do with where the tree is growing.
How much light it gets. How much water it gets. How crowded
they are. How stressed they are. They're not all exactly
the same. But they're both pokey branches. This is
White Spruce.
Here's a young White Spruce.
Note the texture of the bark. Pokiness of the
needles. This particular one
is probably 11 or 12 years old.
Count the nodes.
This is a real good example
of a Colorado Blue Spruce. You can see
that it's more bluish colored than our White
Spruce that we have around here. I know it's Colorado Blue Spruce
because I planted it myself so it's planted in somebody's yard.
Things that you'll notice right away is the needles
are longer than the White Spruce and it's
very definitely even pokier that White Spruce
that we have around here. This is Colorado Blue Spruce.
Along with White
Spruce and Ornamental Colorado Blue Spruce
you may encounter 2 more kinds of
spruce as you get around Northern Minnesota. If you were to
go farther north and east of here up in let's say
the Boundary Waters Canoe Area you'd find some that look kind of like
this only they're darker. Those are called Black Spruce.
We don't many of those right where we're filming so I don't have an
example. And if you are out in the woods and you come across a
plantation of spruce that don't look right those are probably
Norway Spruce. Again, usually
they don't happen in the woods. Sometimes you see them along the sides
of roads. But usually they're in plantations for Christmas
trees. Okay, here is
a fairly classic example of a branch from a Balsam
Fir. What I would like you to notice
and try to remember about a Balsam Fir, is if you
see a branch where the needles are fairly flattened
that's probably a Balsam. And the needles
themselves are flat. And you can
grab a Balsam Fir and it's
nice and soft. Needles on
a Balsam Fir are nice and flat.
The branch is also flat and they're soft to the touch.
You can run your hand over them and you feel no pain.
Now for comparison, this is the Balsam
Fir. This is White Spruce.
And you might notice that the White
Spruce has usually... shorter needles.
These needles are not
flat on the surface. The needles
themselves are not flat . And when you grab
a White Spruce...it pokes you.
Balsam Fir
is nice and soft, doesn't poke. White Spruce
is kind of pokey. Balsam Fir
on the right and White Spruce on the left.
Compare the needles. Kind of an interesting
note when it comes time to have a Christmas tree
White Spruce makes a beautiful Christmas tree but it has
a tendency to smell real bad in the house.
On the other hand, Balsam is that tree that
leaves that really, really nice aroma.
A little hint possibly
to hunters: Balsam when
you smash the needles gives off that real
strong Balsam smell and deer are used
to smelling that. One thing that I would suggest
is a good idea if you're going to walk in the woods if you drop
a Balsam branch to the ground, and
scrub your feet on it...like that
it'll mask the human odor.
Ok, here's a good example of a mature
White PIne. And then right to the left of it here we have an opportunity
to see a medium size Balsam
Fir and White Spruce side by side.
Compare the tips, look at how uniform
the tip of the Balsam Fir is
compare to the White Spruce on the left. Well they aren't
always this way. But as a general rule this is
the way they're going to look. And then compare the bark.
Yeah, here's a Balsam Fir and then
for comparison look at the bark on the Balsam Fir
and compare it to this similar sized White Spruce.
Here you can see some
sap bubbles in the bark of a Balsam
Fir.
One interesting thing that you can see exceptionally
well on Balsam Fir is you can see the growth
pattern of the branches. If you look
right up here, right to the tip of the branch you can see, and again this
is May, you can see three brand new
little branches starting to grow.
Next year at this time, these three
branches will look like these three branches.
Last Spring at this time of the year,
this spot looked like that spot.
The year before that, this
spot looked like that spot.
That's one year growth, another year growth. And by
next Fall, this will be that long and it'll have two new
branches. This will have two new
branches and a new one there. And if you
look at the whole branch, you can see that this branch is
one, two, three, four, five,
six, seven years old where I broke it off.
And you can also see that by the fifth, sixth
and seventh years it's starting to lose it's needles. And
that's why when you see a branch on a tree
there are no needles next to the trunk of the older branches because
they lose them after five or six years.
Here's a rather interesting group of
conifers. These they have a bark
that's similar to a Spruce but if you look they have a really, really
fine looking needle. These are actually a type of
larch. This is Tamarack. And they always
grow in low swampy areas. They're tolerant of a lot of water.
You can see the yellow cowslips down
in the water. If you look very, very
closely you can see thousands and thousands of little
seed cones at the tops of these trees.
This is the only species of Larch that we have.
in Northern Minnesota. And in days gone
by, they used the really large
Tamaracks to make railroad ties. These
are kinda neat because they're the one species of
conifers around here that actually drop their needles
during the winter time. If we were to take this same shot
in October or November these would all
be yellow. And then by the middle of the winter they're bare.
They're just starting to grow new needles right now
by mid-summer the needles will be about twice as
big as they are right now. These are Tamarack.
Take a quick look at this Tamarack
branch. And you can real easily see the pollen
cones of the Tamarack there. And here is the seed
cone from last year. And that's all the bigger they get on a
Tamarack.
Here's an example of a branch of Northern White
Cedar. Sometimes called Arborvitae.
It usually grows down in low areas that are
wet, Cedar swaps, maybe you've heard that term. You might notice
that the needles on this are totally different than anything we've looked at so
far. They're flat,
they're not sharp, they're soft. This is
Northern White Cedar. A favorite
winter forage for deer.
Ok, here's a nice example
of Northern White Cedar.
If you look at the bark on the trunk you can see that it's a finer
bark than most of the actual pines and
spruces and it'll pull off in little strips.
Usually this grows down in swamps but this
one happens to be one of the few Cedars you'll find growing on higher ground.
This is a Northern White Cedar.
This is a typical place where Northern White
Cedar grows, low and wet.
You can also see that there's some Balsam and even some Birch in
here. And several other kinds of deciduous trees.
This is a Cedar swamp.
[leaves crunching]
Here's something kind of interesting
we're down in the Cedar swamp, and here's a nice
fresh Timberwolf track. Here's the four toes
and there's his pad right there. You can see how big he is
compared to my hand. That's not a real big one.
Now lets do a quick review of what we've
actually seen in our walk through the forest. And get ready for
a little quiz at the end of the program. Let's do a quick
review of the things that are actually pines. They're in
the genus of the pines. This again is
White Pine, soft needles, about three
inches long. Five needles per bunch.
White Pine.
The Red Pine, which has a little bit more course
needles and they come in batches of two.
The Jack Pine, which the needles are
shorter and kind of twisted around. The same as the tree is.
This particular one has some
pollen cones on it. And finally the
Scotch Pine or Scots Pine which is not native
to Northern Minnesota. Often times confused with the Jack Pine.
Scots Pine,
Jack Pine, Red
Pine and White Pine.
Ok, let's take a look at the spruce's.
And the one tree that one may be confused with a spruce.
This again is
Northern White Spruce, note the length of the needles.
Sharp needles, go all the way around.
Can be light green all the way to more of a
blue color, but that's the one you find out in the woods. This one
is ornamental Blue Spruce. Colorado
Blue Spruce, this is the one you usually see in town planted in people's yards
longer needles, real pokey.
Hard to grab. And
this is Balsam which is not a
spruce it's a fir. And again, flatter branches
flat needles, nice and soft to the
touch as opposed to pokey to the touch. Balsam
Fir, Colorado
Blue Spruce and
Northern White Spruce.
And finally these two, which are significantly different than the
other branches that we've looked at. This was
Northern White Cedar. It's the only Cedar that we have
remember Red Cedar is actually a type of Juniper.
Flat branches, very very
fleshy needles. Not sharp at all.
And this one, our only species of
larch, which is Tamarack.
And the needles on this one remember are deciduous, they fall
off in the fall. Now this is May, so these are brand new needles
they will get a little bit longer than this. This is
Tamarack, which is a species of Larch.
And Northern White Cedar.
Now let's have a little pre-quiz
to see if you can remember some of the things you've been looking at.
First of all let's look at these two. Both of them have
long needles. These needles are softer
than these, these are longer than these
these are darker green than these.
Ok, these are in bunches of five
and these are in bunches of two.
[wind blowing]
This was Red Pine and this is eastern White Pine.
Now these two.
This is the one that's real common just about everywhere
around Northern Minnesota. Shorter needles than
either the White Pine or the Red Pine.
Kind of not as neat of
a pattern as the White Pine or the Red Pine.
This is the one that's a real scruffy tree, doesn't have any
particular pattern to the tree. And this is the one
that comes from Europe that sometimes
is confused with this. And this one will be in plantations this one is
just about everywhere. This is
Jack Pine, real common. And this
was Scots Pine.
These are the four kinds of pines
that we have around here. Ok, here
are the shorter needled trees
around here, the ones that are more conical
shaped when you see them in the woods. This was the
one that's really, really common around here
comes in many different colors. This was
the one that came from out west that you
see in peoples yard. Both of those are the ones with
the pokey needles, longer needles, shorter needles.
This is the one that had a similarly shaped tree but the
needles are flat. And not pokey at all.
Ok, this one
is White Spruce,
Colorado Blue Spruce and Balsam
Fir.
Ok, this one real
soft, fleshy leaves. Grows down in
low places.
This is Northern White Cedar.
And this was the other one that grew in low places. This was the one
that was actually a deciduous conifer.
It's just growing new needles but it loses it's
needles in the winter time.
This is Tamarack. A type
of Larch.
And now I've mixed them up. See if you can figure out which
ones are which without any prompting at all.
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♪ White Pine.
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♪ Balsam Fir.
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♪ Scots Pine.
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♪ Northern White Spruce.
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♪ Tamarack.
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♪ Colorado Blue Spruce.
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♪ White Cedar or Arborvitae.
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♪ Jack Pine.
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♪ Red Pine.
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♪ Conifers are the most
majestic trees we have in Northern Minnesota. Just look at
this beautiful big White Pine.
It's really special to be able to walk through the woods in Northern
Minnesota and it's even better when you can actually recognize
what it is that you're looking at.
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Join us
again on Common Ground.
If you have an idea for Common Ground in north central
MInnesota email us.
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Production funding of Common Ground was made possible in part by
First National Bank Bemidji. Continuing their second century
of service to the community. A partnership for generations.
Member FDIC.
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