- Source: Nothotsuga
Nothotsuga is a genus of coniferous trees in the family Pinaceae endemic to China. Nothotsuga contains only one living species, Nothotsuga longibracteata, commonly known as the bristlecone hemlock or chang bao tie shan (长苞铁杉), which is found in southeastern China, in southern Fujian, northern Guangdong, northeast Guangxi, northeast Guizhou, and southwest Hunan.
The genus was more diverse in the past, with its earliest fossils being known from Europe during the late Eocene epoch, with the genus being present in Europe as recently as the Pliocene. The oldest fossils near its current distribution dating to the Miocene epoch.
Description
N. longibracteata is an evergreen tree reaching 30 m (100 ft) tall. The leaves are flat, needle-like, 1.2–4 cm (0.5–1.6 in) long and 1–2 mm (0.04–0.08 in) broad, very similar to those of Tsuga. The cones are very similar to those of Keteleeria, but smaller, 2.5–5 cm (1–2 in) long, erect, and mature in about 6–8 months after pollination.
= Taxonomy
=In many respects, Nothotsuga is intermediate between the genera Keteleeria and Tsuga. It was discovered in 1932, and at first treated as Tsuga longibracteata, being classified in its own genus in 1989 when new research indicated how distinct it is from other species of Tsuga - by the larger, erect cones with exserted bracts, and (like Keteleeria) male cones in umbels, and from Keteleeria by the shorter leaves and smaller cones.
Conservation
It is a very rare tree listed as a near-threatened species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature due to historical deforestation, though it is now protected.
References
Further reading
Jin-xing, Lin (1995). "Wood and Bark Anatomy of Nothotsuga (Pinaceae)". Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden. 82 (4): 603–609. doi:10.2307/2399841. JSTOR 2399841.
External links
Arboretum de Villardebelle - photo of cones
Gymnosperm Database
Flora of China
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pinaceae
- Nothotsuga
- Pinaceae
- Keteleeria
- Tsuga
- Cedrus deodara
- Gymnosperm
- Abietoideae
- Juniper
- Ephedra (plant)
- Pseudotsuga