pine: Media

plant genus

Videos

How do pine trees reproduce?
Discover how male gametophytes travel up pine trees to strobili-covered female pine...
Video: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
How Siberian chipmunks prepare for winter
Siberian chipmunks gathering seeds to store for winter.
Video: Contunico © ZDF Studios GmbH, Mainz
Benefits and dangers of pine resin to ants
Wood ants collecting dried resin from a pine tree, with one ant becoming trapped...
Video: Contunico © ZDF Studios GmbH, Mainz; Thumbnail © Thomas Males/Dreamstime.com

Images

stone pine
Stone pines (Pinus pinea) in Doñana National Park near Seville, Spain.
© Martin Ruegner—Photographer's Choice RF/Getty Images
sugar pine
Pine cones of a sugar pine (Pinus lambertiana). The female cones of the...
Richard Sniezko/US Forest Service
Conifer parasite
Dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium minutissimum) growing on a pine tree.
S.Kenaley
Scotch pine
Scotch pine (Pinus sylvestris), the most widely dispersed conifer in the...
© Boyd Norton
pinyon pine
Pinyon, or nut, pine (Pinus edulis). Its edible seeds, known as pine nuts,...
U.S. National Park Service
Monterey pine
The Monterey pine (Pinus radiata), native to a small area in California...
© Phillip Minnis/Shutterstock.com
bristlecone pine
Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata).
U.S. Forest Service
pine nut
Edible pine nuts and their shells, from the Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis).
MPF
logging in Georgia
Loading slash pine near Fitzgerald, south-central Georgia.
Larry Lefever/Grant Heilman Photography
Cluster of pollen-bearing male cones of Austrian (black) pine (Pinus nigra).
© ecepolat—iStock/Getty Images Plus