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1Needles 5 in each bundle; each needle with 1 vascular bundle (visible in X-section, by breaking or cutting a needle); [subgenus Strobus, section Quinquefoliae, subsection Strobus]
2Bracts and bud scalesfimbriate; sheath > 1.3 cm long; needles 20-50 cm long, in bundles of 3 (-4); twigs about 1 cm in diameter; [subgenus Pinus, section Trifoliae, subsection Australes]
3Needles in bundles of 3, or 2 and 3, or 3-4 (-6) (predominantly or at least substantially in 3's); [subgenus Pinus, section Trifoliae, subsection Australes].
4Needles in bundles of 3 (rarely with a few bundles of 2, 4, or 5).
5Cones distinctly longer than broad when open or closed, 5-13 cm long; needles mostly (10-) 12-23 (-28) cm long, 0.7-1.5 mm wide; buds not resinous (or only slightly so); trunks not producing adventitious sprouts (epicormic sprouting)
5Cones about as broad as long, 3-6 (-9) cm long; needles (4-) 7-20 cm long, 1.5-2.0 mm wide; buds resinous; trunks commonly producing adventitious sprouts (epicormic sprouting), especially in response to fire.
6Needles (4-) 7-10 (-15) cm long, persisting only 2 years; cones usually opening at maturity (not serotinous); [ridges, slopes, bottomlands, and bogs of the Mountains and Piedmont, northwards in Coastal Plain acid uplands and wetlands]
9 Leaves mostly in bundles of 2 (and some bundles of 3); seedlings with a grass stage; resin canals 3-9 per leaf; base of open cone rounded; [of peninsular FL]
9 Leaves mostly in bundles of 3 (and some bundles of 2); seedlings lacking a grass stage; resin canals 3-5 per leaf; base of open conetruncate; [more widespread]
10Needles slender to somewhat stout, 0.5-1.2 mm wide.
11Needles 10-17 cm long; branches brittle; spring shoots with a single node, with 1 whorl of branches; [subgenus Pinus, section Pinus, subsection Pinus]
11Needles 2-13 cm long; branches flexible; spring shoots usually with several nodes (several whorls of branches).
12Needles 2-8 cm long, generally twisted; cones either opening at maturity, not serotinous, the scales bearing prominent, slender prickles 2-5 mm long, or serotinous and unarmed; [subgenus Pinus, section Trifoliae, subsection Contortae].
12Needles 5-13 cm long, twisted or not; cones opening at maturity or serotinous, the scales bearing prominent, short, stout prickles or minute, deciduousprickles, and also with a faint to conspicuous horizontal ridge.
14Anthers dark orange; bark flaky, the laminated layers sloughing off in a manner typical of a pine; [native in xeric sands, also sometimes planted in pine tree farms]; [subgenus Pinus, section Trifoliae, subsection Contortae]
16Needles 3-6 (-8) cm long; cones either 6-9 cm long with each scale bearing a stout, woodyspine, or 3-6 cm long and unarmed; [native tree of the Mountains and upper Piedmont or introduced trees south to MD and WV].
18Cones (4-) 6-9 cm long with each scale bearing a stout, woodyspine; [native tree of the Mountains and upper Piedmont]; [subgenus Pinus, section Trifoliae, subsection Australes]