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Detailed Listing For:
Botanical Name:
Acer Griseum
Family:
ACERACEAE
Genus:
Acer
Species:
griseum
Common Name:
Paperbark Maple
Lot#:
060530
Quantity:
20.67 lb
Avg Count Packet:
4
Average Seeds Per Pound:
2452
Seeds Type:
dw
Germination:
30%
Germination Test Type:
Cut
Purity:
99%
Height:
20-30 feet
Collection Locale:
New York
Minimum Hardiness Zone:
5
1 pkt
$ 2.95
1 lb
$ 85.47
Characteristics
Exfoliating Bark
Fall Color
Specimen Tree
Winter Interest
Quantity:
Price:
Growing Info
Scarification
Soak in hot tap water, let stand in water for 24 hours
Stratification
warm stratify for 120 days, cold stratify for 120 days
Germination
sow seed 3/8" deep, tamp the soil, mulch the seed bed
Description
Wikipedia says: It is a small to medium-sized deciduous tree, reaching 6-9 m (20-30 ft) tall, 5-6 m (15-25 ft) wide, with a trunk up to 70 cm (2 ft) diameter. The bark is smooth, shiny orange-red, peeling in thin, papery layers; it may become fissured in old trees. The shoots are densely downy at first, this wearing off by the second or third year and the bark exfoliating by the third or fourth year. The leaves are compound, with a 2–4 cm petiole with three leaflets, each 3-10 cm long and 2-6 cm broad, dark green above, bright glaucous blue-green beneath, with several blunt teeth on the margins. The flowers are androdioecious, produced in small corymbs in spring, the fruitbeing a paired samara with two winged seeds about 1 cm long with a 3 cm wing.[1][3] Cultivation and uses: Paperbark Maple is widely grown as an ornamental plant in temperate regions. It is admired for its decorative exfoliating bark,translucent pieces of which often stay attached to the branches until worn away. It also has spectacular autumn foliage which can include red, orange and pink tones. It was introduced to cultivation in Europe in 1901 by Ernest Henry Wilson for the Veitch Nurseries, and to North America shortly after. Recent attempts have been made to acquire new seed stock from wild populations in China because it is believed that the current gene pool of cultivated specimens is very small. Propagation of Acer griseum is somewhat difficult as seeds have the same parthenocarpic tendencies as those of Acer maximowiczianum.
Comments
Beautiful peeling cinnamon bark; fall color bright red and orange; slow growing; trifoliate leaves; perhaps the most distinctive of all maples; native to central China