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- Q4842402 subject Q7059017.
- Q4842402 subject Q7226304.
- Q4842402 subject Q8135564.
- Q4842402 subject Q8400240.
- Q4842402 subject Q8462049.
- Q4842402 subject Q9505159.
- Q4842402 abstract "The Bahamian pineyards are a tropical and subtropical coniferous forest ecoregion in The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, where they occur on an area of 2,100 km2 (810 sq mi). Pineyards are found on four of the northern islands in The Bahamas: Andros, Abaco, Grand Bahama, where they cover half of the island, and New Providence, as well as the Caicos Islands. Pineyards are dominated by Bahamian pine (Pinus caribaea var. bahamensis), while pinepink (Bletia purpurea), bushy beard grass (Andropogon glomeratus), southern bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum), Florida clover ash (Tetrazygia bicolor), Bahamian trumpet tree (Tabebuia bahamensis), West Indian snowberry (Chiococca alba), devil's gut (Cassytha filiformis), poisonwood (Metopium toxiferum), coontie (Zamia integrifolia) and Florida silver palm (Coccothrinax argentata) grow in the understory. Without regular wildfires, pineyards will be supplanted by broadleafed coppice. Young Bahamian pines require extensive amounts of sunlight to grow, and are resistant to fire once they become adults. Fauna found in the pine forests includes rock iguanas (Cyclura spp.), pygmy boas (Epicrates spp.), the West Indian woodpecker (Melanerpes superciliaris), the Bahama woodstar (Calliphlox evelynae), the Bahama yellowthroat, (Geothlypis rostrata), and the buffy flower bat (Erophylla sezekorni). Kirtland's warblers (Dendroica kirtlandii) migrate from jack pine forests in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan to Bahamian pineyards every year, where they spend the winter.".
- Q4842402 thumbnail Pinus_caribaea_bahamensis_USFWS.jpg?width=300.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q10858780.
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- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q7059017.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q7226304.
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- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q8135564.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q8400240.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q8462049.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q858513.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q866345.
- Q4842402 wikiPageWikiLink Q9505159.
- Q4842402 comment "The Bahamian pineyards are a tropical and subtropical coniferous forest ecoregion in The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands, where they occur on an area of 2,100 km2 (810 sq mi). Pineyards are found on four of the northern islands in The Bahamas: Andros, Abaco, Grand Bahama, where they cover half of the island, and New Providence, as well as the Caicos Islands. Pineyards are dominated by Bahamian pine (Pinus caribaea var.".
- Q4842402 label "Bahamian pineyards".
- Q4842402 depiction Pinus_caribaea_bahamensis_USFWS.jpg.