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Fir

Genus of coniferous trees


Genus of coniferous trees

Firs are evergreen coniferous trees belonging to the genus Abies () in the family Pinaceae. There are approximately 48–65 extant species, found on mountains throughout much of North and Central America, Eurasia, and North Africa. The genus is most closely related to Keteleeria, a small genus confined to eastern Asia.

They are tall trees that can be distinguished from other members of the pine family by the way in which their needle-like leaves are attached singly to the branches with a circular base, and by their cones, which, like those of cedars, stand upright on the branches like candles and disintegrate at maturity.

The wood of firs is used for pulp to make paper, for plywood, and for indoor construction. Some species serve as Christmas trees, while others are used as decorative trees with their brightly coloured cones. In art, Lucas Cranach the Elder painted Madonna under the fir tree for Wrocław Cathedral in 1510.

Etymology

The English name "fir" derives from the Old Norse fyri or the Old Danish fyr. The generic name Abies is the Latin for "fir".

Description

Fir trees are tall, often 40–60 metres and sometimes approaching 100 metres high, usually with a single straight trunk. The crown starts conical, but becomes more varied in shape with age. The primary branches are arranged in whorls around the trunk.

Leaves ===

Firs have needle-like leaves, arranged spirally but often appearing to be in two or more rows on opposite sides of the twigs. The base of each leaf is round and attached to a small pit in the twig. Each leaf is normally twisted at its base so that the side with stomata faces downwards. In the upper crown on cone-bearing branches, the leaves are shorter, curved, and sometimes sharp.

Abies alba PID1015-3.jpg|A. alba – the underside of leaves have two whitish strips formed by wax-covered stomatal bands, while their bases are shaped like suction cups. Abies grandis 5359.JPG|A. grandis foliage – upper side of the leaves, showing the leaves lying flat either side of the shoot Punta de rama pinsapo (Abies pinsapo) (8620598021).jpg|Foliage of A. pinsapo showing the radial leaf arrangement in this species File:Abies mariesii2.JPG|Most firs are in between flat and radial, often with longer leaves at the sides, and shorter leaves above the shoot; here, A. mariesii in Japan File:Abies nordmanniana leaf cross-section.jpg|Cross-section of needle leaf of Abies nordmanniana

Cones

Firs differ from other conifers such as spruces in having erect, cylindrical female seed cones 5 - long that disintegrate at maturity to release the winged seeds. Seed cones take a year to become mature; they start out green or other bright colour, darkening as they develop to dark brown or black. The leaflike seed bracts are visible when young, and in some species remain so. The seeds sit in thin cups; each seed has a triangle-shaped wing. The male cones are pendulous (dangling) and resemble catkins; both pollen and seeds are wind-dispersed.

Abies cone & bits.jpg|Intact and disintegrated Bulgarian fir cones Abies holophylla Manchurian Fir cones.jpg|Immature cones of some species are green; here Manchurian fir Abies holophylla Manchurian Fir Abies holophylla disintegrating cones.jpg|Disintegrating cones of Manchurian fir Abies pindrow India3.jpg|Pindrow fir Abies pindrow with dark purple cones Caucasian Fir, young cultivated tree with cones, Northumberland.jpg|Caucasian Fir Abies nordmanniana young cones with reddish scales and yellow-green bracts Noble Fir, young naturalised tree with cones, Northumberland.jpg|Noble fir Abies procera, with five heavy (20 cm, approx 0.5 kg each) seed cones File:Abies pollen cones Marki 4.JPG|Pollen cones

Evolution

Fossil history

The oldest pollen assignable to the genus dates to the Late Cretaceous in Siberia, with records of leaves and reproductive organs across the Northern Hemisphere from the Eocene onwards.

External phylogeny

Based on transcriptome analysis, Keteleeria is sister to Abies, with the Pseudolariceae the next nearest relatives.

Internal phylogeny

Phylogeny of Abies based on phylogenomic analysis in 2021:

Taxonomy

Taxonomic history

In 1754, Philip Miller set up the genus Abies; he also defined the type species Abies alba. In 1878, George Engelmann classified only a part of the genus; Heinrich Mayr did the same in 1890,{{cite book |last=Mayr |first=Heinrich |year=1890 |title=Monographie der Abielineen des Japanischen Reiches

Species

, Plants of the World Online accepted 49 species. The sections are based on Stull et al. 2021.

Section Abies is found in central, south, and eastern Europe and Asia Minor.

  • Abies alba – silver fir or European silver fir
  • Abies nebrodensis – Sicilian fir
  • Abies borisii-regis – Bulgarian fir
  • Abies cephalonica – Greek fir
  • Abies nordmanniana – Caucasian fir or Nordmann fir
    • Abies nordmanniana subsp. equi-trojani – Kazdağı fir, Turkish fir
  • Abies pinsapo – Spanish fir
    • Abies pinsapo var. marocana – Moroccan fir
  • Abies numidica – Algerian fir
  • Abies cilicica – Syrian fir

Section Balsamea is found in northern Asia and North America, and high mountains further south.

  • Abies fraseri – Fraser's fir
  • Abies balsamea – balsam fir
    • Abies balsamea var. phanerolepis – bracted balsam fir
  • Abies lasiocarpa – subalpine fir
    • Abies lasiocarpa var. arizonica – corkbark fir
    • Abies lasiocarpa var. bifolia – Rocky Mountains subalpine fir
  • Abies sibirica – Siberian fir
    • Abies sibirica var. semenovii
  • Abies sachalinensis – Sakhalin fir
  • Abies koreana – Korean fir
  • Abies nephrolepis – Khinghan fir
  • Abies veitchii – Veitch's fir
    • Abies veitchii var. sikokiana – Shikoku fir

Section Grandis is found in western North America to Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, in lowlands in the north, moderate altitudes in south.

  • Abies grandis – grand fir or giant fir
    • Abies grandis var. grandis – Coast grand fir
    • Abies grandis var. idahoensis – interior grand fir
  • Abies concolor – white fir
    • Abies concolor subsp. concolor – Rocky Mountain white fir or Colorado white fir
    • Abies concolor subsp. lowiana – Low's white fir or Sierra Nevada white fir
  • Abies durangensis – Durango fir
    • Abies durangensis var. coahuilensis – Coahuila fir
  • Abies flinckii – Jalisco fir
  • Abies guatemalensis – Guatemalan fir
    • Abies guatemalensis var. guatemalensis
    • Abies guatemalensis var. jaliscana
  • Abies vejarii

Section Momi is found in east and central Asia and the Himalaya, generally at low to moderate altitudes.

  • Abies kawakamii – Taiwan fir
  • Abies homolepis – Nikko fir
  • Abies recurvata – Min fir
    • Abies recurvata var. ernestii – Min fir
  • Abies firma – Momi fir
  • Abies beshanzuensis – Baishanzu fir
  • Abies holophylla – Manchurian fir
  • Abies chensiensis – Shensi fir
    • Abies chensiensis subsp. salouenensis – Salween fir
  • Abies pindrow – Pindrow fir
  • Abies ziyuanensis – Ziyuan fir

Section Amabilis is found in the Pacific Coast mountains in North America and Japan, in high rainfall areas.

  • Abies amabilis – Pacific silver fir
  • Abies mariesii – Maries' fir

Section Pseudopicea is found in the Sino – Himalayan mountains at high altitudes.

  • Abies delavayi – Delavay's fir
    • Abies delavayi var. nukiangensis
    • Abies delavayi var. motuoensis
    • Abies delavayi subsp. fansipanensis
  • Abies fabri – Faber's fir
    • Abies fabri subsp. minensis
  • Abies forrestii – Forrest's fir
  • Abies densa – Bhutan fir
  • Abies spectabilis – East Himalayan fir
  • Abies fargesii – Farges' fir
  • Abies fanjingshanensis – Fanjingshan fir
  • Abies yuanbaoshanensis – Yuanbaoshan fir
  • Abies squamata – flaky fir

Section Oiamel is found in central Mexico at high altitudes.

  • Abies religiosa – sacred fir
  • Abies hickelii – Hickel's fir
    • Abies hickelii var. oaxacana – Oaxaca fir

Section Nobilis (western U.S., high altitudes)

  • Abies procera – noble fir
  • Abies magnifica – red fir
    • Abies magnifica var. shastensis – Shasta red fir

Section Bracteata (California coast)

  • Abies bracteata – bristlecone fir
  • ?†Abies rigida Frank Knowlton - (Priabonian-Chattian; Colorado)

Section Incertae sedis

  • Abies milleri – (Extinct) Early Eocene

Ecology

Distribution and habitat

Firs are distributed around the Northern Hemisphere. The genus is native across much of North America, Eurasia, Turkey, Syria, Morocco, and Algeria. It is introduced in Scandinavia and the British Isles. Abies sibirica grows as far north as 67°N in Siberia, while A. guatemalensis grows as far south as 15°N in Central America. Most firs favour cold climates, whether at altitude in mountain ranges or at high latitude. Many species have relict distributions, occupying small areas of what were once much larger distributions. Only a few species are widespread.

Abies religiosa (sacred fir) trees give roosting shelter to overwintering monarch butterflies.

File:Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus plexippus) on Oyamel fir (Abies religiosa) Piedra Herrada.jpg|Abies religiosa with roosting monarch butterflies, Piedra Herrada, Valle de Bravo, Mexico File:Independence Pass, CO 5.jpg|Fir forest at high altitude, Independence Pass, Colorado File:Abies lasiocarpa 5922 (cropped).JPG|The narrow conical shape and downward-drooping limbs of northern conifers, like Abies lasiocarpa, help them shed snow.

Pests and diseases

Firs are hosts to a variety of invertebrate pests and fungal diseases. Pest groups include adelgid bugs, aphids, bark beetles, clearwing moths, conifer twig weevils, caterpillars of some moths, nematodes, sawflies, spider mites, and spittlebugs. Diseases of firs include annosus (Heterobasidion) root rot, cankers, and needle cast.

File:1955. Pseudohylesinus grandis egg galleries and larvae on inner bark of silver fir. Baker River District, Mt. Baker National Forest. Washington. (34466337570).jpg|Galleries and larvae of Pseudohylesinus grandis beetles on Abies alba File:Paradiplosis tumifex galls01.jpg|Galls of the gall midge Paradiplosis tumifex in needle leaves of Abies balsamea File:Pucciniastrum epilobii (42).jpg|Pucciniastrum epilobii basidiomycete fungus infecting needle leaves of Abies alba File:Melampsorella caryophyllacearum Italy2.jpg|Witch's broom caused by the basidiomycete fungus Melampsorella caryophyllacearum

Uses

Unlike the Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga), firs produce softwood, often used as pulp or for the manufacture of plywood and rough timber. It is commonly used in Canadian Lumber Standard graded wood, used for internal stud walls and similar applications. Abies spectabilis is used in Ayurveda as an antitussive (cough suppressant) drug. Firs produce a variety of terpenoids that could have practical uses. Terpenoid composition of the bark varies by genetics, geography, age and size of the tree.

Caucasian fir, noble fir, Fraser's fir and balsam fir are popular Christmas trees, generally considered to be the best for this purpose, with aromatic foliage that does not shed many needles on drying out. Many form decorative garden trees, notably Korean fir and Fraser's fir, which produce brightly coloured cones even when very young, still only 1 – tall. Many fir species are grown in botanic gardens and other specialist tree collections in Europe and North America.

In art

File:Cranach Madonna under the fir tree.jpg|Madonna under the fir tree - Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1510

Lucas Cranach the Elder painted Madonna under the fir tree for Wrocław Cathedral in 1510. The painting was taken to Germany after the Second World War for restoration, but a copy was made and substituted for the original. The forgery was discovered, partly because the copy was on a fir board where the original was on lime wood. The original was returned to Poland in 2012, the most valuable painting to be restituted to the country.

References

References

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  2. (2011). "Conifers Around the World : Conifers of the Temperate Zones and Adjacent Regions". DendroPress.
  3. (2018). "ajb21143-sup-0004-AppendixS4". American Journal of Botany.
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  6. (2020). "Northwest Trees: Identifying & Understanding the Region's Native Trees". [[Mountaineers Books]].
  7. (October 2007). "Fossil history and modern distribution of the genus Abies (Pinaceae)". Frontiers of Forestry in China.
  8. (19 July 2021). "Gene duplications and phylogenomic conflict underlie major pulses of phenotypic evolution in gymnosperms". Nature Plants.
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  10. (2021). "main.dated.supermatrix.tree.T9.tre". Figshare.
  11. Miller, Philip. (1754). "The Gardener's Dictionary".
  12. Hickel, Robert (1906-08). Notes pour servir ä la determination pratique des Abietinees. Bull. Soc. Dendrol. France 2: 45 58, f. I 7(15 xi 1906); 3; 5 18, f. 8 30 (15 ii 1907); 4: 41 48, f. 31 46(15v 1907); 5: 82 86(15 viii 1907); 7:5-10, f. a 1 (15 ii 1908); 9; 179-185 (15 viii 1908); 10: 201 208 (15 xi 1908).
  13. Landry, Pierre. (1984). "Synopsis du genre Abies". Bulletin de la Société Botanique de France. Lettres Botaniques.
  14. (1989). "A Classification of Abies Miller (Pinaceae)". Notes of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.
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  16. "Abies Mill. Accepted Species". [[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]].
  17. (1923). "Fossil plants from the Tertiary lake beds of South-Сentral Colorado". United States Geological Survey.
  18. (1990). "Taxonomic revision of the Spermatopsida of the Oligocene Creede flora, southern Colorado". United States Geological Survey.
  19. Schorn, Howard. (1986). "Abies milleri, sp. nov., from the Middle Eocene Klondike Mountain Formation, Republic, Ferry County, Washington". Burke Museum Contributions in Anthropology and Natural History.
  20. "Abies Mill. Distribution". [[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]].
  21. Groth, Jacob. (10 November 2000). "Monarch Migration Study". Swallowtail Farms.
  22. (2013). "Monarch Migration". Monarch Joint Venture.
  23. "Pests in Gardens and Landscapes". University of California Agriculture & Natural Resources: Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program.
  24. Jenkins, Steve. (2023-09-03). "What is CLS timber and what DIY projects is it good for?".
  25. Kershaw, Linda. (2000). "Edible and Medicinal Plants of the Rockies". [[Lone Pine Publishing]].
  26. Hemingway, R. W.. (2018-01-18). "Organic Chemicals from Biomass". CRC Press.
  27. Barton, George M.. (2018-01-18). "Organic Chemicals from Biomass". CRC Press.
  28. Christian, T.. (2021). "''Abies''".
  29. (22 September 2020). ""Madonna under the Fir Tree" by Lucas Cranach the Elder". [[National Museum in Wrocław]].
  30. "Madonna under the Fir Tree".
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