Faithful Couple Sequoia Trees is a photograph by Catherine Sherman which was uploaded on March 26th, 2021.
Faithful Couple Sequoia Trees
Faithful Couple Sequoia Trees, Yosemite National Park, California by Catherine Sherman.
The Faithful Couple trees are giant sequoias... more
Title
Faithful Couple Sequoia Trees
Artist
Catherine Sherman
Medium
Photograph - Photography Painterly
Description
Faithful Couple Sequoia Trees, Yosemite National Park, California" by Catherine Sherman.
The Faithful Couple trees are giant sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum) growing in in Mariposa Grove, a sequoia grove near Wawona, California, in the southwestern part of Yosemite National Park. The joined pair are a rare case in which two trees grew so close together that their trunks have fused together at the base.
The grove is largest of giant sequoias in the park, with several hundred mature examples of the tree. Two of its trees are among the 30 largest giant sequoias in the world.
The giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) is the world's most massive tree, and arguably the largest living organism on Earth. It is neither the tallest extant species of tree (that distinction belongs to the coast redwood), nor is it the widest (that distinction belongs to the baobab tree or Montezuma cypresses), nor is it the longest-lived (that distinction belongs to the Great Basin bristlecone pine). However, with a height of 87 meters (286 feet) or more, a circumference of 34 meters (113 feet) or more, an estimated bole volume of up to 1,490 cubic meters (52,500 cubic feet), and an estimated life span of 1800–2700 years, the giant sequoia is among the tallest, widest and longest-lived of all organisms on Earth.
Giant sequoias grow in well-defined groves in California mixed evergreen forests, along with other old-growth species such as California incense-cedar (Calocedrus decurrens). Because most of the neighboring trees are also quite large, it can be difficult to appreciate the size of an individual giant sequoia. The largest giant sequoias are as tall as a 26-story building, and the width of their bases can exceed that of a city street. They grow at such a rate as to produce roughly 1.1 cubic meters (40 cubic feet) of wood each year, approximately equal to the volume of a 50-foot-tall tree one foot in diameter. This makes them among the fastest growing organisms on Earth, in terms of annual increase in mass.
Uploaded
March 26th, 2021