(Redirected from Pseudotsuga)
'Douglas-fir' is the common name applied to
coniferous trees of the
genus ''Pseudotsuga'' in the family
Pinaceae. There are five species, two in western
North America, one in
Mexico and two in eastern
Asia. The Douglas-firs gave 19th century botanists problems due to their similarity to various other conifers better known at the time; they have at times been classified in
''Pinus'',
''Picea'',
''Abies'', ''
Tsuga'', and even
''Sequoia''. Because of the distinctive cones, Douglas-firs were finally placed in the new genus ''Pseudotsuga'' (meaning "false
Tsuga") by the
French botanist
Carrière in 1867.
The common name honours
David Douglas, the
Scottish botanist who first introduced the tree into cultivation in 1826. Douglas is known for introducing many North American native conifers to
Europe. The
hyphen in the common name indicates that Douglas-firs are not true firs; i.e. they are not members of the genus ''Abies''.
[1]
The Douglas-firs are medium-size to large or very large
evergreen trees, to 20-100 m tall. The
leaves are flat and needle-like, generally resembling those of the
firs. The female
cones are pendulous, with persistent scales (unlike true firs), and are distinct in having a long tridentine (three-pointed)
bract that protrudes prominently above each scale.
Douglas-firs are used as food plants by the
larvae of some
Lepidoptera species including
Autumnal Moth,
Bordered White,
The Engrailed,
Pine Beauty,
Turnip Moth and the
gelechiids ''
Chionodes abella'' and ''
Chionodes periculella'' which have both been recorded on ''P. menziesii''.
A Californian
Native American myth explains that each of the three-ended bracts are a tail and two tiny legs of the
mice who hid inside the scales of the tree's cones, which was kind enough to be the enduring sanctuary for them during forest fires.
Species and varieties
By far the best-known is the very widespread and abundant
North American species ''Pseudotsuga menziesii'', a taxonomically complex species
[2] divided into two major subspecies (treated as distinct species by some botanists);
Coast Douglas-fir or 'Green Douglas-fir', on the
Pacific coast; and
Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir or 'Interior Douglas-fir', in the interior west of the continent. The latter is in turn divided into two varieties, 'Blue Douglas-fir' or 'Colorado Douglas-fir' (var. ''glauca'') in the southern Rocky Mountains, and 'Gray Douglas-fir' or 'Fraser River Douglas-fir' (var. ''caesia'') in the northern Rocky Mountains. The species as a whole is generally known as simply 'Douglas-fir', or as 'Common Douglas-fir'; other less widely used names include 'Oregon Douglas-fir', 'Douglas Tree', and 'Oregon Pine'. It can attain heights of 100 m (330 ft), second only to the
Coast Redwood (old claims of trees up to 126 m (415 ft) have never been verified), and is the
state tree of
Oregon. The specific name, ''menziesii'', is after
Archibald Menzies, a Scottish physician and rival
naturalist to
David Douglas, who first discovered the tree on
Vancouver Island in 1791. Away from its native area, it is also extensively used in
forestry as a
plantation tree for
timber in
Europe,
New Zealand, southern
South America and elsewhere. It is also
naturalised in the
British Isles,
Chile and
New Zealand, sometimes to the extent of becoming an
invasive species subject to control measures.

Coast Douglas-fir branch

Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir twig

The buds of a Coast Douglas-fir
All of the other species are of restricted range and little-known outside of their respective native environments, and even there are often rare and only of very scattered occurrence, occurring in mixed forests; all are listed as being of unfavourable
conservation status.
;North America
★
Coast Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga menziesii'' subsp. ''menziesii''
★
★
Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga menziesii'' subsp. ''glauca''
★
Mexican Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga lindleyana''
★
Bigcone Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga macrocarpa''
;Asia
★
Japanese Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga japonica''
★
Chinese Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga sinensis'' var. ''sinensis''
★
★
Narrow-cone Chinese Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga sinensis'' var. ''gaussenii''
★
★
Short-leaf Chinese Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga sinensis'' var. ''brevifolia''
★
★
Yunnan Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga sinensis'' var. ''forrestii''
★
★
Taiwan Douglas-fir, ''Pseudotsuga sinensis'' var. ''wilsoniana''
Uses
Douglas-fir
wood is used for structural applications that require to withstand high loads. It is used extensively in the construction industry. Other examples include its use for homebuilt
aircraft. Very often, these aircraft were designed to utilise
Sitka Spruce, which is getting increasingly difficult to source in aviation quality grades.
Diseases
Trivia
★ The tallest tree in the
United Kingdom is a Douglas-fir (''Pseudotsuga menziesii''). The tree, growing in Reelig Glen by
Inverness is called Dughall Mor and stands at 64 m. It was measured in 2005 by Tony Kirkham and Jon Hammerton from the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, the late Jim Paterson from
The Tree Register and David Jardine of
The Forestry Commission.
[3]
★ On
May 14 2001, a Douglas-fir was planted in honor of
Douglas Adams after his death on
May 11 2001. They are also sometimes planted on
Towel Day.
References
1. Check List of native and naturalized trees of the United States (including Alaska), , E. L., Little, U.S. Department of Agriculture, , USDA Agricultural Handbook 41
2. Rangewide patterns of allozyme variation in Douglas-fir, , Peng, Li, Canad. J. Forest Res.,
★
[3] The Trees That Made Britain, BBC Wales.
External links
★
Arboretum de Villardebelle - cone photos Images of cones of selected species
★
Gymnosperm Database
★
Dughall Mor at Forestry Commission
★
The Tree Register