Pinus nigra (Austrian Pine)

Plant Info
Also known as: European Black Pine
Genus:Pinus
Family:Pinaceae (Pine)
Life cycle:perennial woody
Origin:Europe
Habitat:sun; urban landscapes, parks
Bloom season:May - June
Plant height:40 to 60 feet
Wetland Indicator Status:none
MN county distribution (click map to enlarge):Minnesota county distribution map
National distribution (click map to enlarge):National distribution map

Pick an image for a larger view. See the glossary for icon descriptions.

Detailed Information

Flower:

Flowers are borne in structures called cones (strobili) with separate male and female cones on the same tree. Male (pollen) cones are long and cylindrical, ½ to ¾ inch long, in dense clusters at the base of new branchlets (candles) with the newly expanding bud just above. The female strobili form at the tips of the new candle and are small and egg shaped, typically purplish in color.

Leaves and bark: Leaf type: simple

[photo of branchlet and needles] Leaves are needle-like, 3 to 6 inches long, in bundles of two that spiral up around the branch. Needles are stiff (but do not break cleanly when bent) and sharply pointed, dark bluish green in color, mostly straight to slightly twisted, flat on the facing surfaces (D shaped in cross section).

[photo of trunk] New twigs are greenish brown, a smooth surface but for tangled, flat white hairs around the needle receptacles, turning scaly and grayish brown with age. Bark becomes dark gray with thick flat vertical ridges, furrowed in between.

[photo of branch buds and 1-year-old cones] Branch buds are large, around 1 inch long, conical with a long, abrupt point; scales are reddish brown, loose with papery margins.

Fruit: Fruit type: seed without plume

[photo of 2-year-old cone] The fruit is a brown hard cone, small and egg-shaped, ½ inch long at end of first growing season, 2½ to 3 inches long at maturity, the scales with a mostly blunt, short spine.

Notes:

Austrian Pine has never been found naturalized in Minnesota, though it has been reported spreading on its own in Michigan. We include this species in our field guide mainly for our many urban users that would seek identification in the urban landscape. More so in the past than today, it's an urban planted tree that performs better than most native pines in our harsh urban environments. While in its native forest habitats it a large tree to 100', in urban landscapes it is often under 50' and typically retains a large, broadly round crown. It could be confused with our native Red Pine (Pinus resinosa) which also has only two needles in a bundle, but the needles are darker green and stiffer (breaking cleanly when bent) along with Austrian Pine's large, fuzzy white bud and cones double in size compared to Red Pine. Ponderosa Pine (Pinus ponderosa), another non-naturalized urban pine, is also very similar except it frequently has 3 needles per cluster, its buds are reddish and often covered in resin, and its cones can be up to 6 inches long and armed by a very conspicuous sharp spine on the scales.

Native Plant Nurseries, Restoration and Landscaping Services ↓

Map of native plant resources in the upper midwest

  • Morning Sky Greenery - Native Prairie Plants
  • Natural Shore Technologies - Using science to improve land and water
  • Minnesota Native Landscapes - Your Ecological Problem Solvers
  • Spangle Creek Labs - Native orchids, lab propagated
  • Prairie Restorations - Bringing people together with the land

More photos

Photos courtesy Peter M. Dziuk taken in Ramsey County.

Comments

Have you seen this plant in Minnesota, or have any other comments about it?

Posted by: Sharon King - Rice,MN
on: 2019-03-28 10:28:16

Our electric company wants to trim this tree back. This is a huge old,but very healthy tree. will trimming it back invite disease?

Post a comment

Note: All comments are moderated before posting to keep the riff-raff out. An email address is required, but will not be posted—it will only be used for information exchange between the 2 of us (if needed) and will never be given to a 3rd party without your express permission.

For info on subjects other than plant identification (gardening, invasive species control, edible plants, etc.), please check the links and invasive species pages for additional resources.



(required)




Note: Comments or information about plants outside of Minnesota and neighboring states may not be posted because I’d like to keep the focus of this web site centered on Minnesota. Thanks for your understanding.