The scientific name lusitanica (of Portugal) refers to its very early cultivation there, with plants imported from Mexico to the monastery at Buçaco, near Coimbra in Portugal in about 1634; these trees were already over 130 years old when the species was botanically described by Miller in 1768.
In Mexico, the tree is also known as cedro blanco (white cedar) or teotlate.
Description
Hesperocyparis lusitanica is an evergreenconifer tree with a conic to ovoid-conic crown, growing to 40 m tall. The foliage grows in dense sprays, dark green to somewhat yellow-green in colour. The leaves are scale-like, 2–5 mm long, and produced on rounded (not flattened) shoots. The seed cones are globose to oblong, 10–20 mm long, with four to 10 scales, green at first, maturing brown or grey-brown about 25 months after pollination.
The cones may either open at maturity to release the seeds, or remain closed for several years, only opening after the parent tree is killed in a wildfire, allowing the seeds to colonise the bare ground exposed by the fire. The male cones are 3–4 mm long, and release pollen in late Winter / Early Spring (February–March in the northern hemisphere). In most of its natural environment the rainfall occurs with more quantity in summer.
Taxonomy
Hesperocyparis lusitanica was given its first scientific name by the botanist Philip Miller who named it Cupressus lusitanica in 1768,[2] because he described it from collections made in Portugal.[3] The species has a large number of synonyms and the species Hesperocyparis benthamii has been treated as variety or subspecies of H. lusitanica.[4] In 2009 a paper was published moving this species and most of the New World Cupressus to the new genus Hesperocyparis.[2] As of 2024[update] this is listed as the accepted species name with no subspecies or varieties by Plants of the World Online,[2]World Flora Online,[5] and the Gymnosperm Database.[3]
Cultivation and uses
Fast-growing and drought tolerant, but only slightly frost tolerant, Hesperocyparis lusitanica has been introduced from Mexico to different parts of the world like New Zealand[6]. It is widely cultivated, both as an ornamental tree and for timber production, in warm, temperate and subtropical regions around the world. Trees have not been selected for cultivation from northern Mexico populations, which have a heavy drought endurance.[7]
Locations
Its cultivation and subsequent naturalisation in parts of southern Asia has caused a degree of confusion with native Cupressus species in that region; plants sold by nurseries under the names of Asian species such as Cupressus torulosa often prove to be this species.
It has been planted widely for commercial production: at high altitudes in Colombia (3,300 m, 10,800 ft), Bolivia, Ethiopia and South Africa, and near sea level throughout New Zealand[6]. In Colombia trees are planted to form windbreak hedges and for preventing soil erosion on slopes. It has been planted by Tanzanian mountain farmers for soil preservation and commercial use since the 1990s.[8]
It is being planted in the Argentine province of San Luis,[9]Argentina at 1,500 m (4,900 ft) above sea level to create artificial forests in a land originally lacking them in a very similar climate to that of its native habitat.
^Felger, Richard S.; Johnson, Matthew B.; Wilson, Michael F. (2001). The trees of Sonora, Mexico. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN0-19-512891-5.
^UEDA Gen, The Regional System of the Mountain People: Place, Household, and the Communal in Rural Tanzania (Japanese language), Tohoku University Press, 2011, Sendai, Japan, pp.348 - 351. (上田元『山の民の地域システム タンザニア農村の場所・世帯・共同性』、東北大学出版会、2011年)
Farjon, Aljos (2005). A monograph of Cupressaceae and Sciadopitys. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN978-1842460689.
Rzedowski, J. (1978). Vegetación de México. Distrito Federal, Mexico. ISBN978-9681800024.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Dvorak, W. S.; Hodge, G. R.; Gutiérrez, E. A.; Osorio, L. F.; Malan, F. S.; Stanger., T. K. (2000). Conservation and Testing of Tropical and Subtropical Forest Species by the CAMCORE Cooperative. Raleigh: College of Natural Resources, North Carolina State University. ISBN978-0620264600.
Martínez, Maximinio (1979). Catálogo de nombres vulgares y científicos de plantas mexicanas. Fondo de Cultura Económica. ISBN978-9681600112.
Richardson, D.M., ed. (1998). Ecology and biogeography of Pinus. Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0521789103.
Gutiérrez, Millán; Ladrach, W. (1980). Resultados a tres años de la siembra directa de semillas de Cupressus lusitanica y Pinus patula en finca Los Guaduales Departamento del Cauca. Informe de Investigación 60. Cali, Colombia: Cartón de Colombia S.A.