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Transcript
 JACKSON GROVE Cornell Plantabons Plant List Last Updated 7/31/12 Magnolia Collection
Common Name
Scientific Name
Magnolia × brooklynensis 'Black Beauty'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia ×brooklynensis 'Hattie Carthan'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia ×brooklynensis 'Woodsman'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia ×kewensis 'Wada's Memory'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia ×loebneri 'Merrill'
LOEBNER MAGNOLIA
1
Notes
Flowers are a very dark purple, the same shade as the "black" Tulips, and chalk-­‐white interiors serve to highlight the dark exteriors. Flowers appear in late April and through much of May. Small tree with a narrow habit with parchment yellow flowers subtly striated with magenta and having a delightful fragrance. The flowers have unusually heavy substance and appear with the earliest leaves in late April and May, so late that there is less chance of frost damage.
Buds the color of bittersweet chocolate open to reveal multi-­‐hued flowers of purple, chartreuse, and rose. Its pastel shades are complementary, never garish. Flowering is delayed until early May, so late frosts are almost never a problem.
Vigorous, rapid grower with fastigiate form; very hardy. Blooms when only 2' tall, and is floriferous. White flowers are larger than those of M. kobus (DS 175). Selected by Brian Mulligan at the University of Washington, Seattle, WA from a group of seedlings obtained from Mr. K. Wada of Yokohama, Japan. (DS 175 & DS 28).
Strong growing; flowers with 15 petals, somewhat larger than those of M. stellata, petals also twice as wide (DS 6). A free-­‐
flowering form; flowers 3" to 3 1/2" across with 15 white petals, borne in late April; magnificent in flower. Common Name
Scientific Name
Magnolia acuminata 'Skylands' Best'
CUCUMBER TREE
Magnolia 'Elizabeth' AGM
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia 'Flamingo'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia 'Golden Gift'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia 'Jon Jon'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia kobus 'Borealis'
KOBUS MAGNOLIA (JAPAN)
Magnolia 'Limelight'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia 'Porcelain Dove'
MAGNOLIA
2
Notes
A repeat flowering yellow Magnolia from the Skylands Botanical Garden in New Jersey. This selection has unusually large yellow flowers, 6 inches across, which appear in late spring with repeat bloom in late summer. Leaves are dark green and especially handsome.
Neat, pyramidal habit. Finely tapering flower buds open to display flowers of the clearest primrose-­‐yellow. Blooming season April through mid-­‐May at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden (DS 9). Flowers have pleasant fragrance (DS 175).
Brilliant unfading flamingo-­‐pink flowers open just before leaves emerge on a pyramidal tree from the late Phil Savage. The flowers have a tulip shape which is retained until shattering. (M. acuminata 'Fertile Myrtle' x M. sprengeri 'Diva'.)
A yellow magnolia of smaller stature, reaching only 6' wide by 8' tall in 10 years. Flowers are a strong yellow, and they are produced in multiple terminal buds and even axillary buds from the trunk all the way to the tips of the branches, so that the plant in bloom is a globe of yellow. Flowers keep opening for about 4 weeks.
White flowers washed with rose tints at the base open in late April and early May. The blooms are very fragrant and quite large, measuring 10-­‐12" across. A smallrounded tree with excellent branching habit.
A hardy form which is more vigorous and reaches larger sizes that the type.
Plants upright, reaching 15'-­‐18' in height; flowers are pale yellow-­‐green to cream.
A mostly deciduous small tree with heaviest bloom in June and additional flowers apppearing throughout the summer. The 4" white flowers open in late afternoon to reveal a ring of rich red stamens. Flowers have a good fragrance. A hybrid of Magnolia globosa with M. virginiana.
Common Name
Scientific Name
Magnolia 'Rose Marie'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia salicifolia
ANISE MAGNOLIA
Magnolia salicifolia 'Miss Jack'
ANISE MAGNOLIA
Magnolia sieboldii
small flowered magnolia
Magnolia 'Sunsation'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia 'Sunspire'
MAGNOLIA
Magnolia tripetala
Magnolia 'Yellow Lantern'
UMBRELLA MAGNOLIA
MAGNOLIA
3
Notes
Large flowers with broad tepals open wide displaying a brilliant rosy pink on the exterior, and this vivid color carries through to the interior in shades of medium pink. Flowering begins late, avoiding most frosts, and can continue for up to six weeks. The tree blooms at a young age and is particularly floriferous. (M. 'Pink Surprise' x M. 'Daybreak').
Slender, rather narrowly pyramidal tree reaching 20-­‐30' in height. Flowers are pure white, fragrant, 3-­‐4" in diameter, and are composed of 6 petals which open in April before the leaves. The stems when bruised emit a pleasant lemon scent.
Narrow foliage is anise-­‐scented. The white flowers are produced in great numbers.
Deciduous tree or shrub reaching 20' in height with light gray bark. Leaves obovate or elliptic, 2"-­‐6" long and 2"-­‐4" wide with an acute apex and cuneate or rounded base, the upper surface dark green, the lower light green with yellowish pubescence. Flowers white, fragrant, saucer-­‐shaped, nodding or pendent with 9-­‐12 obovate tepals; stamens showy magenta; outer seed coats bright red.
Tree with yellow flowers with a noticable pink untertone which enhances the yellow.
Deep yellow flowers are produced on a small columnar tree . Flowers bloom late enough to avoid nearly all frosts.
Tree similar to M. macrophylla, reaching 15' to 30' (to 40') in height. Leaves reach 10" to 24" in length and are clustered near the ends of the branches, creating an umbrella effect. Flowers are 6" to 10" across, solitary, unpleasantly scented, borne in May and early June (before those of M. macrophylla). Fruits are 4" long, elongated, cone-­‐shaped, rosy-­‐
red, maturing in September and October.
Upright, single-­‐stemmed tree; flower buds are large, tomentose, opening to a uniform lemon-­‐yellow, cup-­‐shaped flower similar in form and size to that of 'Alexandrina', the color is without any greenish tinges; plants bloom at a young age.
Common Name
Scientific Name
Notes
Additional Trees
Common Name
Scientific Name
Malus sieboldii 'Wooster'
FLOWERING CRABAPPLE
Quercus ×heterophylla
BARTRAM OAK
Quercus ×schuettei
SCHUETTES OAK
Quercus acutissima
SAWTOOTH OAK
Quercus bicolor (Urban Tree of the Year)
SWAMP WHITE OAK
Quercus imbricaria
SHINGLE OAK
Quercus mongolica
MONGOLIAN OAK
4
Notes
Plants reach 12' in height and 10' in width; leaves very dark green; buds bright carmine-­‐
red opening to single white flowers; fruit 0.6" across, brilliant orange-­‐red, coloring very early in August and persisting through October when consumed by migrating birds.
Deciduous tree reaching 80' in height; leaves variable in shape, usually oblong to elliptic, to 6" long, with 3 to 5 pairs of bristle-­‐tipped lobes, or nearly entire, glabrous beneath except for tufts of hairs in axils of veins (DS 3). A naturally occuring hybrid found where the ranges of Q. macrocarpa and Q. bicolor overlap. Plants of medium growth rate, reaching 70' with a densely rounded crown, and producing large, low-­‐tanin acorns. Suggested as a good choice for wildlife feed.
A dense, broad pyramid in youth, varying in old age from oval-­‐rounded to broad-­‐rounded with low-­‐slung, wide-­‐spreading branches. Plants reach 35' to 45' in height with variable width. Foliage opens a brilliant yellow to golden-­‐yellow in spring, becoming deep lustrous green in summer, often developing a good clear yellow to golden brown fall color, late, often in November.
Plants form broad, open, round-­‐topped crown with a short, limby trunk; 50-­‐60' tall with an equal or greater spread. Bark flaky, grayish-­‐brown, divided by deep longitudinal fissures into rather long flat ridges.
Pyramidal to upright-­‐oval in youth, assuming a broad-­‐rounded outline in old age, often with drooping lower lateral branches; plants reach 50' to 60' in height (can attain 80' to 100') with an equal or greater spread.
Tall tree, reaching 25 to 30 m; young shoots glabrous; leaves obovate to obovate-­‐oblong, 10 to 20 cm long,fruits ovate, 2 cm long, nearly sessile, acorns 1/3 covered by a thick cup, scales warty, the apical ones fringed-­‐
acuminate.
Common Name
Scientific Name
Quercus montana
CHESTNUT OAK
Quercus palustris
PIN OAK
Quercus robur
ENGLISH OAK
Quercus rubra
RED OAK
Quercus shumardii
SHUMARD RED OAK
5
Notes
Rounded, relatively dense tree reaching 60' to 70' in height with a comparable but irregular spread. Leaves 4"-­‐6" long, 1.5"-­‐3.5" wide, ovate to obovate-­‐oblong, acute or acuminate, cuneate or rounded at base, coarsely and irregularly toothed with 10-­‐14 pairs of obtuse, often mucronate teeth, lustrous dark yellow-­‐green above, grayish tomentulose beneath. Fall color orange-­‐
yellow to yellow-­‐brown. Acorns sweet.
Strongly pyramidal tree, usually with a central leader, the lower branches pendulous, the middle horizontal and the upper upright; in old age the tree assumes an oval-­‐pyramidal form and loses many of the lower branches; plants reach 60' to 70' in height, 25' to 40' in width; can attain over 100' in height. Foliage dark glossy green in summer, assuming russet, bronze or red fall color. Suffers from iron chlorosis in high pH soils.
Large, massive, broadly rounded, open-­‐
headed tree with a short trunk; in youth pyramidal to rounded; can reach 75' to 100' or more in height with a comparable spread. In the U.S.A. it averages 40' to 80' in height under landscape conditions.
Rounded habit in youth, in old age often becoming round-­‐topped and symmetrical; relatively fast growing (can grow 2' per year over a 10 year period). Fall color russet-­‐red to bright red. Plants 60-­‐75' tall, 40-­‐50' wide, although can attain over 100' in height in the wild.
Pyramidal tree in youth becoming more wide-­‐
spreading at maturity much like Q. coccinea that reaches 40-­‐60' in height in landscape situations, to 100' in the wild. Difficult to separate from Q. palustris and Q. coccinea except by winter buds which are gray to straw-­‐colored never reddish brown. Fall color varies from a good russet-­‐red to yellow-­‐
bronze or faint reddish-­‐brown. Acorns are ovate, 3/4-­‐1" long, short-­‐stalked, and covered only at the base by a hemishperical involucral cap.
Common Name
Taxus ×media '#8'
Scientific Name
Notes
ANGLOJAP YEW
Cross of T. baccata and T. cuspidata, medium tree or large shrub. Size 2 to 20', growth rate, slow, needle like leaves, blunt scales. Blooms March to April. Fruit, olive like seed which is covered by a red aril. Bark, scaly, flaky brown bark. Prefers moist, sandy, slightly acidic soil, well drained, sun or shade.
Taxus ×media 'Brevicata'
JAPANESE YEW
Taxus ×media 'Brownii'
BROWN YEW
Taxus ×media 'Dutweileri'
YEW
Taxus ×media 'Hatfieldii'
ANGLOJAP YEW
Taxus ×media 'Hicksii'
HICKS YEW
6
Male, broad and open habit, to 4 m high and wide in 20 years, somewhat similar to 'Hatfieldii', but with wider and coarser needles; USA, before 1950 [DS 8].
Finely textured, dense, nearly globose shrub, somewhat broader than high, reaching about 2.5 m in height, and 3.5 m in width, well-­‐
branched with short shoots and deep green, 15.. to 20mm long, somewhat sickle-­‐shaped needles (DS 8). Male clone with densely rounded habit, reaching 9' in height, 12' in width after 20 years with dark green needles (DS 9).
Male and female; rather fast-­‐growing, broad and bushy, irregular or more rounded in form, somewhat stocky, about 1.5 m tall; needles deep green.
Male, found in several different forms in the U.S.A.; the original form broadly conical, 4m tall, and 3m wide with erect shoots and needles radially arranged, deep gren with good color (DS 8). A dense, broadly pyramidal form with dark green needles; predominantly male; a twenty-­‐year old plant is 12' by 10'; excellent clone (DS 9).
Columnar in habit reaching 20' in height after 15 to 20 years; needles lustrous dark green above, lighter beneath; male and female clones exist. Narrowly columnar, about 2-­‐3 imes taller than wide, branches ascending, long, often with the peak of the plant wider than the base; needles radial on erect shoots, distinctly 2-­‐ranked on the lateral shoots, 25 to 30 cm long, 3 mm wide, glossy dark green above with a raised midrib, light green beneath.
Common Name
Scientific Name
Taxus ×media 'Kelseyi'
ANGLOJAP YEW
Taxus brevifolia 'Erecta'
PACIFIC YEW
Taxus canadensis 'Compacta'
CANADIAN YEW
Taxus cuspidata 'Columnaris'
ADAM COLUMNAR YEW
Taxus cuspidata 'Intermedia'
JAPANESE YEW
Taxus cuspidata 'Prostrata'
PROSTRATE JAPANESE YEW
Taxus cuspidata 'Sieboldii'
JAPANESE YEW
Taxus 'MacBethii'
YEW
Tilia cordata
SMALL-­‐LEAVED EUROPEAN LINDEN
Tilia petiolaris
PENDENT SILVER LINDEN
7
Notes
Female form of quite dense and compact habit, upright, about 3.5 m tall, 2.5 m wide in twenty years; needles very densely arranged, 18 to 20 mm long, about 2.5 mm wide, sharply acuminate, black-­‐green above, lighter beneath, fruting abundantly on 3-­‐ to 4-­‐year-­‐
old plants (DS 8). Free-­‐fruiting female form, erect and dense, taller than wide, a twenty-­‐
year-­‐old plant being 12' tall, 9' wide; very dark green needles (DS 9).
Habit columnar
As for the species, except more densely branched.
Broadly columnar in form, becoming wider at the peak than at the base; sparsely branched at base; medium-­‐strong grower; needles deep green.
Dwarf, rounded, compact, slow-­‐growing form with leaves densely set; resembles 'Nana', with the same heavy, plump dark green leaves, but starts growth earlier in the season and grows faster [DS 9]. "A very vague form, quite variably described by different nurseries and authors" [DS 8].
Male form, low-­‐growing, reaching 1 m in height and 3 m in width, the branches more outspread than the other forms, somewhat ascending; needles about 20 mm long, v-­‐
form in arrangement, somewhat sickle-­‐
shaped, attractively dark green above, olive-­‐
green beneath.
A selection with an especially dense, upright habit [DS 8]. A listed name for T. cuspidata of no botanical standing [DS 3].
Slow growing, poisonous evergreen tree.
Pyramidal in youth, becoming upright-­‐oval to pyramidal-­‐rounded in old age, reaching 60' to 70' in height with a spread equal to 1/2 to 2/3 of the height; it can attain 80' to 90' in height. Flowers yellowish, fragrant, borne in 5-­‐ to 7-­‐flowered pendulous, 2" to 3" long cymes in late June and early July.
Closely allied to T. tomentosa, differing chiefly in the gracefully pendulous branches. Tree reaching 75' in height with pendent branches that are tomentose when young; leaves ovate-­‐orbicular, about 4" long,