![]() intolerant of urban conditions of compacted soil, heat, drought, deicing salt.creates dense shade which reduces turf vigor.excellent in large yards, parks, gold courses, campuses.although shade tolerant, full sun is needed for proper landscape development.not tolerant of high heat, pollution, road salt.prefers well-drained, moist fertile soils.does not perform well when root zone is restricted.develops thick, irregular, recurved plates with age.small yellowish green, before leaves in April.shaded leaves on plant interior are yellow, while exterior, exposed leaves turn orange with a red cast.5-lobed, with the 2 basal lobes being smaller.outline is upright oval when younger and more or less gumdrop-shaped to rounded when mature.75' or so, but can be well over 100' tall.primary large, hardwood tree in northeastern U.S.northeastern and north-central United States, adjacent parts of Canada.campus: several on the east and south of Sackett resident hall on Jefferson Ave. Fall color from orange-yellow to red.Ĭorvallis: young tree on the south side of the small central circle in Central Park, north of the play area. 'Temple's Upright' - it has a strong central leader but its major and minor lateral branches are also ascending, but gradually.'Sweet Shadow' - leaves slightly drooping, deeply lobed, and each lobe cut orange-red fall color. ![]() 'Newton Sentry' - extremely upright, "columnar", major branches have many short stubby branchlets. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |