Juniperus tibetica: taxon details and analytics

Domain
Kingdom
Plantae
Phylum
Tracheophyta
Class
Pinopsida
Order
Pinales
Family
Cupressaceae
Genus
Juniperus
Species
Juniperus tibetica
Scientific Name
Juniperus tibetica

Summary description from Wikipedia:

Juniperus tibetica

Juniperus tibetica, the Tibetan juniper, is a species of juniper, native to western China in southern Gansu, southeastern Qinghai, Sichuan, and Tibet Autonomous Region, where it grows at high to very high altitudes of 2,600–4,900 metres (8,500–16,100 feet). This species has the highest known elevation treeline in the northern hemisphere.

The highest known stand of J. tibetica was found at 29°42' N 96°45' E at 4900 m in southeastern Tibet (Xizang Autonomous Region, Baxoi County).

It is an evergreen coniferous shrub or small to medium-sized tree growing to heights of 5–15 m (16–49 ft), rarely 30 metres (98 ft), with a trunk up to 2 metres (6+12 ft) in diameter. The leaves are of two forms, juvenile needle-like leaves 5 millimetres (14 inch) long on seedlings and occasionally (regrowth after browsing damage) on adult plants, and adult scale-leaves 1.5–3 mm (11618 in) long on older plants; they are arranged in decussate opposite pairs or whorls of three. The cones are ovoid, berry-like, 9–16 mm (3858 in) long and 7–13 mm (1412 in) diameter, blue-black, and contain a single seed; they are mature in about 18 months. The male cones are 1.5–2 mm (116332 in) long, and shed their pollen in spring. It is usually monoecious (male and female cones on the same plant), but occasionally dioecious (male and female cones on separate plants).

...
 

Juniperus tibetica in languages:

Chinese
西藏圓柏
Chinese
藏檜
English
Tibetan juniper
Estonian
tiibeti kadakas

Images from inaturalist.org observations:

We recommend you sign up for this excellent, free service.

Juniperus tibetica
©madfox, some rights reserved (CC-BY-NC)