Michigan Trees - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Michigan Trees Part 43 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
WINTER-BUDS.--Terminal bud absent; lateral buds ovoid, acute, often lopsided, smooth, dark red, 1/4 inch long.
BARK.--Twigs smooth, reddish gray, becoming dark gray or brown; dark gray and smooth on young stems, on old trunks thick, deeply furrowed into broad, scaly ridges.
WOOD.--Light, soft, close-grained, tough, light red-brown, with thick sapwood of nearly the same color.
DISTRIBUTION.--Common in most parts of the Lower Peninsula, frequent in the Upper Peninsula.
HABITAT.--Prefers rich, well-drained, loamy soils.
NOTES.--Rapid in growth. Easily transplanted. Recommended for street and ornamental planting.
+SUMMER KEY TO THE SPECIES OF CORNUS+
a. Leaves mostly alternate; branches usually greenish; flowers not surrounded by large petal-like bracts; fruit globular, blue, borne many in loose cl.u.s.ters. _C. alternifolia_, p. 207.
aa. Leaves opposite; branches usually reddish or yellowish; flowers surrounded by large petal-like bracts; fruit ovoid, scarlet, borne in close cl.u.s.ters of 3-4. _C. florida_, p. 205.
+WINTER KEY TO THE SPECIES OF CORNUS+
a. Leaf-scars mostly alternate; buds light brown; branches usually greenish. _C. alternifolia_, p. 207.
aa. Leaf-scars opposite; buds greenish; branches usually reddish or yellowish. _C. florida_, p. 205.
[Ill.u.s.tration: +Flowering Dogwood. Dogwood. Boxwood+
1. Winter twig, with leaf buds, 1.
2. Portion of twig, enlarged.
3. Winter twig, with flower bud, 1.
4. Leaf, 1/2.
5. Flowering branchlet, 1/2.
6. Flower, enlarged.
7. Fruit, 1.]
+CORNACEAE+
+Flowering Dogwood. Dogwood. Boxwood+
_Cornus florida L._
HABIT.--A bushy tree with a height of 15-30 feet and a short trunk 8-12 inches in diameter; slender, spreading branches form a flat-topped crown.
LEAVES.--Opposite, closely cl.u.s.tered at the ends of the branchlets, simple, 3-5 inches long, 2-3 inches broad; ovate to elliptical; obscurely wavy-toothed; thick and firm; bright green, covered with minute, appressed hairs above, pale and more or less p.u.b.escent beneath, turning bright scarlet in autumn; petioles short, grooved.
FLOWERS.--May, with the leaves; perfect; greenish; in dense cl.u.s.ters, surrounded by 4 large, white or pinkish, petal-like bracts (often mistaken for the corolla), borne on short, stout peduncles; calyx 4-lobed, light green; petals 4, yellow-green; stamens 4, alternate with the petals; ovary 2-celled.
FRUIT.--October; an ovoid, scarlet drupe, borne in close cl.u.s.ters of 3-4; flesh is bitter.
WINTER-BUDS.--Leaf-buds narrow-conical, acute, greenish; flower-buds spherical or vertically flattened, grayish.
BARK.--Twigs pale green, becoming red or yellow-green their first winter, later becoming light brown or red-gray; red-brown or blackish on the trunk, often separating into quadrangular, plate-like scales.
WOOD.--Heavy, hard, strong, tough, close-grained, brownish, with thick, lighter colored sapwood.
DISTRIBUTION.--Southern Michigan as far north as the Grand-Saginaw Valley.
HABITAT.--Prefers rich, well-drained soil, usually under the shade of other trees.
NOTES.--A valuable species for ornamental purposes. Rather slow of growth.
[Ill.u.s.tration: +Blue Dogwood. Alternate-leaved Dogwood+
1. Winter twig, 1.
2. Portion of twig, enlarged.
3. Leaf, 3/4.
4. Flowering branchlet, 1/2.
5. Flower, enlarged.
6. Fruiting branchlet, 1/2.]
+CORNACEAE+
+Blue Dogwood. Alternate-leaved Dogwood+
_Cornus alternifolia L. f._
HABIT.--A small tree or large shrub reaching a height of 25-30 feet and a trunk diameter of 6-8 inches; more often smaller than this. The long, slender branches are arranged in irregular whorls, forming flat, horizontal tiers, giving the tree a storied effect.
LEAVES.--Mostly alternate and cl.u.s.tered at the ends of the branchlets; simple, 3-5 inches long, 2-1/2-3 inches broad; oval or ovate, long-pointed, wedge-shaped at the base; obscurely wavy-toothed; thin; dark green, nearly glabrous above, paler and covered with appressed hairs beneath, turning yellow and scarlet in autumn; petioles slender, grooved, hairy, with clasping bases.
FLOWERS.--May-June, after the leaves; perfect; borne on slender pedicels in many-flowered, irregular, open cymes from the season's shoots; calyx cup-shaped, obscurely 4-toothed, covered with fine, silky, white hairs; petals 4, cream colored; stamens 4; ovary 2-celled.
FRUIT.--October; a globular, blue-black drupe, borne in loose, red-stemmed cl.u.s.ters; flesh bitter.
WINTER-BUDS.--Leaf-buds small, acute, light brown; flower-buds spherical or vertically flattened.
BARK.--Twigs greenish or reddish, becoming smooth, dark green; thin, dark red-brown and shallowly fissured on the trunk.
WOOD.--Heavy, hard, close-grained, red-brown, with thick, lighter colored sapwood.
DISTRIBUTION.--Scattered throughout both peninsulas.