Prumnopitys andina explained

Prumnopitys andina, the lleuque or Chilean plum yew,[1] is an evergreen coniferous tree native to south-central Chile and a few areas in adjacent parts of westernmost Argentina from 36 to 40° South latitude. It lives on moderately wet soils, preferably on Andean slopes from 500–.

It grows up to 30m (100feet) high, with a trunk up to 2m (07feet) in diameter. The leaves are linear to sickle-shaped, 15–30 mm long and 2 mm broad. The seed cones are highly modified, reducing to a central stem 2–4 cm long bearing 1-4 scales, each scale maturing berry-like, oval, 10–15 mm long and 10 mm broad, green maturing dark purple, with a soft edible pulp covering the single seed. The seeds are dispersed by birds, which eat the 'berries' and pass the seeds in their droppings. Seeds are very difficult to germinate. It has a straight and cylindrical trunk, with gray and shiny bark.

Before the genus Prumnopitys was distinguished, it was treated in the related genus Podocarpus as Podocarpus andinus. It has also been treated by some botanists as Prumnopitys spicata (Molloy & Muñoz-Schick 1999); however this name is illegitimate (Mill & Quinn 2001). Prumnopitys elegans (Phil) is a synonym for Prumnopitys andina.

The fruit (an aril) are tasty, 1.5cm (00.6inches) long, blue-purple in color, are eaten by Native American people in Chile, and a marmalade is produced with them. The tree is also occasionally grown as an ornamental tree and a hedge in oceanic climate areas in northwest Europe and the Pacific Northwest of North America. In these areas, it is also sometimes known as "plum-yew" or "plum-fruited yew", though these names are more commonly applied to plants in the genus Cephalotaxus.

The wood is a yellowish color and has a good quality. It is used in furniture and construction.

Evidence suggests that very little regeneration is occurring to replace current ageing trees in populations. In 2007, the Forestry Commission planted large numbers of young trees at Bedgebury Pinetum in the UK as part of a project aiming to conserve the genetic resources of endangered conifers.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. http://forums.forestresearch.gov.uk/newsrele.nsf/web-allbysubject/8EF49E28F1FD5264802571CE0044B3F8 British Forestry Research
  2. Web site: The Trees . Friends of Bedgebury National Pinetum . 15 December 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091105204931/http://www.bedgeburypinetum.org.uk/TheTrees/ . 5 November 2009 .