Abies religiosa


The sacred fir or Abies religiosa is a fir native to the mountains of central and southern Mexico and western Guatemala. It grows at high altitudes of in cloud forests with cool, humid summers and dry winters in most of its habitat regime. In the state of Veracruz, it grows with precipitation all year long. The tree is resistant to regular winter snowfalls.

Names

The Spanish name comes from the Nahuatl word oyametl. It is also called árbol de Navidad in Mexico. The English name derives from the binomial Abies , literally "religious fir". This comes from the use of its cut foliage in religious festivals and in churches in Mexico.

Description

Abies religiosa is a medium-sized to large evergreen coniferous tree growing to tall with a trunk diameter of up to. The leaves are needle-like, flattened, long and wide by thick, dark green above, and with two blue-white bands of stomata below; the leaf apex is acute. The leaf arrangement is spiral on the shoot, but with each leaf variably twisted at the base so they lie flat to either side of and above the shoot, with none below the shoot. The shoots are reddish-brown, hairless or with scattered pubescence.
The cones are long and broad, dark blue-purple before maturity; the scale bracts are purple or greenish, of moderate length, with the tips exposed in the closed cone. The winged seeds are released when the cones disintegrate at maturity about 7–9 months after pollination. Trees from the western end of the range on Nevado de Colima, Jalisco have cones with larger, reflexed bract scales ; these are sometimes treated as a separate species, Abies colimensis.

Significance

The sacred fir is the preferred tree for the monarch butterfly to reside in colonies during its hibernation in the forests of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. Although monarch butterflies are known in other parts of the southern Mexican highlands as some specimens do not migrate, the bulk of them gather in a few protected fir forests in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve near the towns of Angangueo and Avándaro, from December to March.
The wood of the sacred fir is rather soft and thus not very suited for woodworking. Nonetheless, its distribution is decreasing because of logging for fuel and other human-related disturbances.
A 2012 paper by Cuauhtemoc Saenz-Romero among others, published in Forest Ecology and Management found that "the area suitable for the oyamel is likely to diminish by 96 percent by 2090, and disappear completely within the reserve."

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