Trees of the Northern United States - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Trees of the Northern United States Part 25 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
1. =Styrax Americana=, Lam. (AMERICAN STORAX.) Shrub or small tree (4 to 10 ft.), with oblong, alternate leaves acute at both ends, 1 to 3 inches long, smooth or very nearly so; fruit in. long, in racemes of 3-4. Wild along streams, Virginia and south; occasionally cultivated, and probably hardy throughout.
[Ill.u.s.tration: S. j.a.ponica.]
2. =Styrax j.a.ponica=, Sieb. (j.a.pAN STORAX.) Leaves alternate, membranaceous, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, serrate or crenate, to 3 in.
long, smooth or with short stellate hairs; flowers and fruit in long racemes. A beautiful low tree, 6 to 12 ft. high; from j.a.pan. Hardy as far north as Philadelphia, but needing a little protection in Ma.s.sachusetts and Missouri.
GENUS =57. PTEROSTYRAX.=
Similar to Styrax, but with the fruit in panicles, 5-winged, conical, and crowned with the persistent base of the style.
[Ill.u.s.tration: P. corymbsum.]
=Pterostyrax corymbsum=, Sieb. Leaves deciduous, 2 to 5 in. long, feather-veined, petioled, ovate, rarely cordate at base, sharply serrate, with stellate hairs. Shrub or small tree, 10 to 12 ft. high, cultivated from j.a.pan; with ashy-gray bark, and white flowers turning yellowish or purplish with age; blooming in May, fruit ripe in August.
Not perfectly hardy in Ma.s.sachusetts.
GENUS =58. HALeSIA.=
Small trees or shrubs with alternate, simple, deciduous, serrate leaves.
Flowers large, 1 in. long, conspicuous, white, hanging, bell-shaped, monopetalous, 4-lobed; blooming in spring. Fruit with a single, rough, elongated, bony nut surrounded by a 2- to 4-winged coat; ripe in autumn.
Wood light-colored, very hard and fine-grained.
[Ill.u.s.tration: H. diptera.]
1. =Halesia diptera, L.= (TWO-WINGED SILVERBELL TREE.) Leaves large (4 to 5 in. long), ovate, acute, serrate, softly p.u.b.escent. Fruit with 2 conspicuous, broad wings, sometimes with 2 intermediate narrow ridges. A small tree or a large shrub, wild in the south, and cultivated as far north as New York City.
[Ill.u.s.tration: H. tetraptera.]
2. =Halesia tetraptera, L.= (FOUR-WINGED SILVERBELL TREE.) Leaves smaller (2 to 4 in.), oblong-ovate, finely serrate. Fruit smaller, with 4 nearly equal wings. A small, beautiful tree, 10 to 30 ft. high, more hardy than Halesia diptera, and therefore cultivated occasionally throughout. Wild in Virginia and south.
GENUS =59. SMPLOCOS.=
Shrubs or small trees, with leaves furnis.h.i.+ng a yellow dye.
[Ill.u.s.tration: S. tinctria.]
=Smplocos tinctria=, L'Her. (HORSE-SUGAR. SWEETLEAF.) Leaves simple, alternate, thick, 3 to 5 in. long, elongate-oblong, ac.u.minate, nearly entire, almost persistent, pale beneath, with minute p.u.b.escence, sweet-tasting. Flowers 6 to 14, in close-bracted, axillary cl.u.s.ters, 5-parted, sweet-scented, yellow; in early spring. Fruit a dry drupe, ovoid, in. long. A shrub or small tree, 10 to 20 ft. high. Delaware and south.
ORDER =XXIX. OLEaCEae.= (OLIVE FAMILY.)
An order of trees and shrubs, mainly of temperate regions.
GENUS =60. FRaXINUS.=
Trees with petioled, opposite, odd-pinnate leaves (one cultivated variety has simple leaves). Flowers often inconspicuous, in large panicles before the leaves in spring. Fruit single-winged at one end (samara or key-fruit), in large cl.u.s.ters; ripe in autumn. Some trees, owing to the flowers being staminate, produce no fruit. Wood light-colored, tough, very distinctly marked by the annual layers. The leaves appear late in the spring, and fall early in the autumn.
* Flowers with white corolla; a cultivated small tree 8.
* Flowers with no corolla. (=A.=)
=A.= Leaves pinnate; leaflets petiolate; calyx small, persistent on the fruit. (=B.=)
=B.= Fruit broad-winged, in. wide. South 5.
=B.= Wings much narrower. (=C.= )
=C.= Branchlets round and p.u.b.escent 2.
=C.= Branchlets round and smooth. (=D.=)
=D.= Leaflets nearly entire 1.
=D.= Leaflets serrate near tip, entire below 3.
=C.= Branchlets, on vigorous growths, square 4.
=A.= Leaves pinnate; leaflets sessile; no calyx. (=E.=)
=E.= Native; wing of fruit rounded at tip 6.
=E.= Cultivated from Europe; wing notched at tip 7.
=A.= Leaves simple; variety under 7.
[Ill.u.s.tration: F. Americana.]
1. =Fraxinus Americana=, L. (WHITE ASH.) Leaflets 7 to 9 (usually 7), stalked, ovate or lance-oblong, pointed, s.h.i.+ning above, pale and either smooth or p.u.b.escent beneath, somewhat toothed or entire. Flowers almost always dioecious (May), thus the fruit is found on but a portion of the trees. The fruit (August to September) terete and marginless below, abruptly dilated into the wing, which is 2 to 3 times as long as the terete portion; entire fruit about 1 in. long. A common large forest-tree, 60 to 80 ft. high, with gray, furrowed bark, smooth, grayish-green branchlets, and rusty-colored buds. Extensively cultivated.
[Ill.u.s.tration: F. p.u.b.escens.]
2. =Fraxinus p.u.b.escens=, Lam. (RED ASH.) Like the White Ash, but to be distinguished from it by the down on the young, green or olive-green twigs, and on the footstalks and lower surface of the leaves. Fruit acute, 2-edged at base, gradually dilated into the wings as in Fraxinus viridis. A smaller and more slender tree than the White Ash; growing in about the same localities, but rare west of the Alleghanies; heart-wood darker-colored.
[Ill.u.s.tration: F. viridis.]
3. =Fraxinus viridis=, Michx. f. (GREEN ASH.) Smooth throughout; leaflets 5 to 9, bright green on both sides, ovate or oblong-lanceolate, often wedge-shaped at base and serrate above. Fruit acute and 2-edged or margined at base and gradually spreading into an oblanceolate or linear-spatulate wing as in the Red Ash. Small to middle-sized trees (like the Red Ash), found throughout, but common westward.
[Ill.u.s.tration: F. quadrangulata.]
4. =Fraxinus quadrangulata=, Michx. (BLUE ASH.) Leaflets 7 to 9, short-stalked, oblong-ovate or lanceolate, pointed, sharply serrate, green on both sides. Fruit narrowly oblong, blunt, of the same width at both ends, or slightly narrowed at the base. A large tree, 60 to 80 ft.
high, with smooth square twigs on the vigorous growths. Wisconsin to Ohio and Kentucky.
[Ill.u.s.tration: F. platycarpa.]