Coast Redwood
| Coast Redwood Status Lower Risk | ||||||||||||||
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| Sequoia sempervirens |
The Coast Redwood or California Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is an evergreen, long-lived, monoecious tree in the family Cupressaceae. It is the tallest of all trees living today, reaching up to 112 m in height, and 7 m diameter at the base. The oldest known Coast Redwood is about 2200 years old; many others in the wild exceed 600 years of age. It is one of three species of trees known as redwoods.
| Table of contents |
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2 Reproduction 3 Range and ecology 4 External links 5 Reference |
Statistics
Trees over 60 m (200 feet) are common, and many are over 90 m (300 feet).
In 2004, an article in Nature reported that the theoretical maximum potential height of Coast Redwoods (or any other tree) is limited to between 122-130 m (400-425 feet), due to gravity and the friction between water and the vessels through which it flows.
Among current living trees only some Giant Sequoias are larger; these are less tall, but have thicker trunks. The largest living redwood has a volume of 1,037 cubic metres (36,621 cubic feet), compared to the largest Giant Sequoia with a volume of 1,487 cubic metres (52,513 cubic feet). A redwood cut down in 1926 had a claimed volume of 1,794 cubic metres (63,354.5 cubic feet), but this is not verified.

This native area provides a unique environment with heavy seasonal rains (250 cm / 100 in annually), cool coastal air and fog keeping this forest contstanly damp year round. As this heavy rain has left the soil with few nutrients, these trees depend on the entire biotic community of the forest, and complete recycling of the trees when dead. Logging interrupts this process. This forest community includes Douglas-fir, Western Hemlock, Tanoak, Madrone, and other trees along with a wide varieity of ferns, Redwood sorrel, mosses and mushrooms. Redwood forests provide habitat for a variety of mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. Remnant old growth redwood stands provide habitat for the federally threatened Spotted Owl and the California-endangered Marbled Murrelet.
Coast Redwood is one of California's most valuable timber species. The wood is soft, weak, easily split, and very resistant to decay. The clear wood is used for dimension stock, siding, fencing, and shingles. Redwood burls are used in the production of table tops, veneers, and turned goods.
See also:
Reproduction
Coast Redwood reproduces both sexually and asexually. Seed production begins at 10-15 years of age, and large seed crops occur frequently, but viability of the seed is low. The low viability may be an adaptation to discourage seed predators, which do not want to waste time sorting chaff (empty seeds) from edible seeds. The winged seeds are small and light, averaging 265,000 seeds/kg (120,000 seeds per pound). The wings are not effective for wide dispersal, and seeds are dispersed by wind an average of only 60-120 m (200-400 feet) from the parent tree. Coast Redwoods can reproduce asexually by layering or sprouting from the root crown or stump. Sprouts orginate from dormant or adventitious buds at or under the surface of the bark. They develop all round the circumference of a cut stump, but tend to be most numerous on the downhill side of the stump. Within a short period after sprouting each sprout will develop its own root system, with the dominant sprouts forming a ring of trees around the parent root crown. Sprouts can achieve heights of 2m (7 feet) in a single growing season.Range and ecology
Coast Redwoods occupy a narrow strip of land approximately 725 km (450 miles) in length and 8-55 km (5-35 miles) in width along the Pacific coast. The northern boundary of its range is marked by two groves on the Chetco River on the western fringe of the Klamath Mountains, 25 km (15 miles) north of the California-Oregon border, and found mostly in the Jedediah Smith Redwood Forest. The southern boundary of the range is marked by a grove in Salmon Creek Canyon in the Santa Lucia Mountains of southern Monterey County, California.External links
Reference
