Pinus heldreichii
Bosnian pine

Bosnian pine (Pinus heldreichii syn. Pinus leucodermis) is a mountainous conifer found in the southern and western part of the Balkans, near the Mediterranean basin. The adult tree is characterized by ridged and furrowed bark with angular patches. The tree is frost-hardy, has demonstrated low susceptibility to insect attacks and is capable of adapting to extreme environmental conditions. These abilities, as well as its great colonizing potential, make the tree suitable for reforestation of extensive dry and high-altitude areas.

The Bosnian pine is also used for ornamental purposes and in landscaping, though its timber is rarely used for construction.

Bosnian pine grows in dry, sunny spots in mixed or pure stands at 900-2500 m elevation, reaching the Alpine timberline.

As indicated by its scientific name, it is debated whether the Bosnian pine represents two different species or two different varieties of the same species.

in situ genetic conservation unit
ex situ genetic conservation unit
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EUFORGEN’s publications on Abies alba

Technical guidelines for genetic conservation and use

Pinus heldreichii syn. Pinus leucodermis - Technical guidelines for genetic conservation and use for Bosnian pine

Publication Year: 2008
Author: Vendramin, G.G.; Fineschi, S.; Fady, B.

The main strategy adopted so far for the conservation of this species is linked with national parks and other protected areas. In Bulgaria for example, Bosnian pine is conserved in the Pirin National Park (where a 1200- year-old tree has been recorded) and in the Slavyanka Biosphere Reserve which includes the largest Bosnian pine habitat on the Balkan Peninsula. In Albania, 159 ha of P. heldreichii are located within national parks and recently established integrated nature reserves. In Italy, Bosnian pine is conserved in the Pollino National Park and Serbia has three natural reserves for the species. Throughout the former Yugoslavian republics, Bosnian pine is a protected species.

Conserving the diversity of Bosnian pine must include not only ecological and genetic considerations at local and landscape scales but also social, economic and legal issues. While national parks and nature reserves are a necessary first step for conserving this species, another indispensable step is acquiring and compiling knowledge on existing forest genetic resources. This information is available for the Italian and Greek populations but is still lacking for the rest of the natural range.

Designating in situ gene conservation units where appropriate forest management strategies are used is an efficient way of conserving the genetic resources of a target species, while making evolutionary changes possible over time. Genetic diversity and adaptability can be conserved from one generation to the next by conserving sufficiently large populations of locally adapted trees and allowing natural regeneration from a large-enough number of parents. Forest stands of more than 20 hectares, established from local seed sources and managed for nature conservation, could qualify as gene conservation units for Bosnian pine.
Exotic or unknown Bosnian pine material should not be grown within the remaining stands or in their vicinity. Natural regeneration should be closely monitored and assisted by sowing locally collected seeds if needed.

Bosnian pine also needs to be protected from two common man-made disturbances: forest fires and over-grazing. The Italian populations are under a particularly intense threat from both. Fires can cause rapid and drastic reduction of the population size by killing adult trees with consequent losses in seedling genetic diversity and adaptive potential. Intensive grazing prevents natural regeneration and may also lead to local extinction when adult trees die.

Ex situ conservation should be used if forests are under pressure or if their genetic resources are of particular interest (for example the marginal Italian populations). Ex situ stands must be established with care to represent the original genetic diversity of a population. Given the high inbreeding and low outcrossing rates of this species, ideally seeds should be collected from a large number of trees (approx. 100) and from trees growing at least 100 meters apart. Ecological conditions of the ex situ conservation site should be comparable to those of the original sites, possibly with lower environmental stress. Such an ex situ collection exists in southern Italy (Pollino mountain, Calabria), covering approximately 60 hectares.

The main strategy adopted so far for the conservation of this species is linked with national parks and other protected areas. In Bulgaria for example, Bosnian pine is conserved in the Pirin National Park (where a 1200- year-old tree has been recorded) and in the Slavyanka Biosphere Reserve which includes the largest Bosnian pine habitat on the Balkan Peninsula. In Albania, 159 ha of P....
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Acknowledgements

This distribution map has been developed by the European Commission Joint Research Centre (partly based on the EUFORGEN map) and released under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC-BY 4.0)


Caudullo, G., Welk, E., San-Miguel-Ayanz, J., 2017. Chorological maps for the main European woody species. Data in Brief 12, 662-666. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2017.05.007

The following experts have contributed to the development of the EUFORGEN distribution maps:

Fazia Krouchi (Algeria), Hasmik Ghalachyan (Armenia), Thomas Geburek (Austria), Berthold Heinze (Austria), Rudi Litschauer (Austria), Rudolf Litschauer (Austria), Michael Mengl (Austria), Ferdinand Müller (Austria), Franz Starlinger (Austria), Valida Ali-zade (Azerbaijan), Vahid Djalal Hajiyev (Azerbaijan), Karen Cox (Belgium), Bart De Cuyper (Belgium), Olivier Desteucq (Belgium), Patrick Mertens (Belgium), Jos Van Slycken (Belgium), An Vanden Broeck (Belgium), Kristine Vander Mijnsbrugge (Belgium), Dalibor Ballian (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Alexander H. Alexandrov (Bulgaria), Alexander Delkov (Bulgaria), Ivanova Denitsa Pandeva (Bulgaria), Peter Zhelev Stoyanov (Bulgaria), Joso Gracan (Croatia), Marilena Idzojtic (Croatia), Mladen Ivankovic (Croatia), Željka Ivanović (Croatia), Davorin Kajba (Croatia), Hrvoje Marjanovic (Croatia), Sanja Peric (Croatia), Andreas Christou (Cyprus), Xenophon Hadjikyriacou (Cyprus), Václav Buriánek (Czech Republic), Jan Chládek (Czech Republic), Josef Frýdl (Czech Republic), Petr Novotný (Czech Republic), Martin Slovacek (Czech Republic), Zdenek Špišek (Czech Republic), Karel Vancura (Czech Republic), Ulrik Bräuner (Denmark), Bjerne Ditlevsen (Denmark), Jon Kehlet Hansen (Denmark), Jan Svejgaard Jensen (Denmark), Kalev Jðgiste (Estonia), Tiit Maaten (Estonia), Raul Pihu (Estonia), Ülo Tamm (Estonia), Arvo Tullus (Estonia), Aivo Vares (Estonia), Teijo Nikkanen (Finland), Sanna Paanukoski (Finland), Mari Rusanen (Finland), Pekka Vakkari (Finland), Leena Yrjänä (Finland), Daniel Cambon (France), Eric Collin (France), Alexis Ducousso (France), Bruno Fady (France), François Lefèvre (France), Brigitte Musch (France), Sylvie Oddou-Muratorio (France), Luc E. Pâques (France), Julien Saudubray (France), Marc Villar (France), Vlatko Andonovski (FYR Macedonia), Dragi Pop-Stojanov (FYR Macedonia), Merab Machavariani (Georgia), Irina Tvauri (Georgia), Alexander Urushadze (Georgia), Bernd Degen (Germany), Jochen Kleinschmit (Germany), Armin König (Germany), Armin König (Germany), Volker Schneck (Germany), Richard Stephan (Germany), H. H. Kausch-Blecken Von Schmeling (Germany), Georg von Wühlisch (Germany), Iris Wagner (Germany), Heino Wolf (Germany), Paraskevi Alizoti (Greece), Filippos Aravanopoulos (Greece), Andreas Drouzas (Greece), Despina Paitaridou (Greece), Aristotelis C. Papageorgiou (Greece), Kostas Thanos (Greece), Sándor Bordács (Hungary), Csaba Mátyás (Hungary), László Nagy (Hungary), Thröstur Eysteinsson (Iceland), Adalsteinn Sigurgeirsson (Iceland), Halldór Sverrisson (Iceland), John Fennessy (Ireland), Ellen O'Connor (Ireland), Fulvio Ducci (Italy), Silvia Fineschi (Italy), Bartolomeo Schirone (Italy), Marco Cosimo Simeone (Italy), Giovanni Giuseppe Vendramin (Italy), Lorenzo Vietto (Italy), Janis Birgelis (Latvia), Virgilijus Baliuckas (Lithuania), Kestutis Cesnavicius (Lithuania), Darius Danusevicius (Lithuania), Valmantas Kundrotas (Lithuania), Alfas Pliûra (Lithuania), Darius Raudonius (Lithuania), Robert du Fays (Luxembourg), Myriam Heuertz (Luxembourg), Claude Parini (Luxembourg), Fred Trossen (Luxembourg), Frank Wolter (Luxembourg), Joseph Buhagiar (Malta), Eman Calleja (Malta), Ion Palancean (Moldova), Dragos Postolache (Moldova), Gheorghe Postolache (Moldova), Hassan Sbay (Morocco), Tor Myking (Norway), Tore Skrøppa (Norway), Anna Gugala (Poland), Jan Kowalczyk (Poland), Czeslaw Koziol (Poland), Jan Matras (Poland), Zbigniew Sobierajski (Poland), Maria Helena Almeida (Portugal), Filipe Costa e Silva (Portugal), Luís Reis (Portugal), Maria Carolina Varela (Portugal), Ioan Blada (Romania), Alexandru-Lucian Curtu (Romania), Lucian Dinca (Romania), Georgeta Mihai (Romania), Mihai Olaru (Romania), Gheorghe Parnuta (Romania), Natalia Demidova (Russian Federation), Mikhail V. Pridnya (Russian Federation), Andrey Prokazin (Russian Federation), Srdjan Bojovic (Serbia) , Vasilije Isajev (Serbia), Saša Orlovic (Serbia), Rudolf Bruchánik (Slovakia), Roman Longauer (Slovakia), Ladislav Paule (Slovakia), Gregor Bozič (Slovenia), Robert Brus (Slovenia), Katarina Celič (Slovenia), Hojka Kraigher (Slovenia), Andrej Verlič (Slovenia), Marjana Westergren (Slovenia), Ricardo Alía (Spain), Josefa Fernández-López (Spain), Luis Gil Sanchez (Spain), Pablo Gonzalez Goicoechea (Spain), Santiago C. González-Martínez (Spain), Sonia Martin Albertos (Spain), Eduardo Notivol Paino (Spain), María Arantxa Prada (Spain), Alvaro Soto de Viana (Spain), Lennart Ackzell (Sweden), Jonas Bergquist (Sweden), Sanna Black-Samuelsson (Sweden), Jonas Cedergren (Sweden), Gösta Eriksson (Sweden), Markus Bolliger (Switzerland), Felix Gugerli (Switzerland), Rolf Holderegger (Switzerland), Peter Rotach (Switzerland), Marcus Ulber (Switzerland), Sven M.G. de Vries (The Netherlands), Khouja Mohamed Larbi (Tunisia), Murat Alan (Turkey), Gaye Kandemir (Turkey), Gursel Karagöz (Turkey), Zeki Kaya (Turkey), Hasan Özer (Turkey), Hacer Semerci (Turkey), Ferit Toplu (Turkey), Mykola M. Vedmid (Ukraine), Roman T. Volosyanchuk (Ukraine), Stuart A'Hara (United Kingdom), Joan Cottrell (United Kingdom), Colin Edwards (United Kingdom), Michael Frankis (United Kingdom), Jason Hubert (United Kingdom), Karen Russell (United Kingdom), C.J.A. Samuel (United Kingdom).
 

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