Changes

5,394 bytes added ,  16:59, 22 June 2009
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:  +
{{Inc|
 +
Paulownia (after Anna Paulowna, princess of the Netherlands).
 +
Scrophulariaceae. Ornamental trees, grown for their beautiful flowers
 +
in showy panicles and for their large handsome foliage.
 +
 +
Deciduous, rarely half-evergreen: lvs. opposite, long- petioled,
 +
entire or sometimes 3-lobed or coarsely toothed, without stipules:
 +
fls.-. in terminal panicles; calyx campanulate, 5-lobed; corolla with
 +
long slightly curved tube, and spreading oblique 5-lobed limb;
 +
stamens 4: fr. a 2-celled caps., loculicidally dehiscent, with
 +
numerous small winged seeds.—About 8 species in China; in Japan only
 +
cult.
 +
 +
The paulownias are medium-sized or fairly large trees with stout
 +
spreading branches, large long-petioled leaves similar to those of
 +
catalpa, and violet or nearly white large flowers resembling those of
 +
the foxglove or gloxinia in shape, appearing in terminal panicles
 +
before or with the leaves and followed by ovoid pods remaining on the
 +
tree and conspicuous during the winter. P. tomentosa is fairly hardy
 +
in sheltered positions as far north as Massachusetts, but the
 +
flower-buds are usually - killed in winter, and it does not flower
 +
regularly north of New York City; plants raised from seed collected
 +
in Korea have proved hardier at the Arnold Arboretum than the
 +
commonly cultivated Japanese plant, also the var. lanata from Central
 +
China seems to be somewhat hardier. As an ornamental foliage plant it
 +
may be grown as far north as Montreal, where it is killed to the
 +
ground every winter, but throws up from the root vigorous shoots
 +
attaining 10 to 14 feet, with leaves over 1 foot and occasionally
 +
even 2 feet long. If used as a foliage plant and cut back to the
 +
ground every spring, the young shoots should be removed, except one
 +
or very few on each plant; during the first years of this treatment
 +
they will grow more vigorous every year, but afterward they will
 +
decrease in size, weakened by the continuous cutting back; they
 +
should then be replaced by strong young plants. Where the flower-buds
 +
which are formed the previous year are not killed by frost, the
 +
paulownia is one of the most conspicuous flowering trees in spring,
 +
and in summer the foliage, although it is of somewhat dull color,
 +
attracts attention by the size of the leaves. In temperate climates
 +
it is sometimes used as an avenue tree. It thrives best in a light
 +
deep loam, and in a sheltered position. The other species are still
 +
little known in cultivation and are probably tenderer; they are great
 +
favorites with the Chinese and much planted in central and southern
 +
China. Propagation is by seeds sown in spring or by root-cuttings,
 +
and by greenwood cuttings under glass; it may be grown also from
 +
leaf-cuttings; the young unfolding leaves when about 1 inch long are
 +
cut off close to the stems and inserted in sand under a hand-glass in
 +
the propagating-house.
 +
 +
Paulownia tomentosa in southern California reaches a height of 40
 +
feet in twenty-five years, with a spread nearly as great. When in
 +
full leaf it makes a dense shade. It starts to bloom before the
 +
leaves come and all is over before the tree is in full leaf. For this
 +
reason it is not a favorite. The Jacaranda is a prettier blue, more
 +
floriferous, lasts three times as long, the blooms continuing until
 +
the tree is in full leaf. It is out of leaf not more than half as
 +
long as is paulownia and in mild winters holds much of its foliage
 +
throughout, being properly an evergreen. It makes as dense shade as
 +
the paulownia, has a prettier leaf and is more desirable in every
 +
way. The growth of the two trees is about the same at the end of a
 +
quarter century. The habit of the paulownia in retaining dry
 +
seed-pods on dead limbs 3 or 4 feet long is very unpleasing, and
 +
necessitates a thorough cleaning each year to the tip end of the
 +
uppermost branch—often a hard task to accomplish. (Ernest Braunton.)
 +
P. Duclouxii, Dode. Tree, to 60 ft.: lvs. oblong-ovate, with open
 +
sinus- at the base, tomentose below, to 1 ft. long: fls. about 3 in.
 +
long, pale lavender-purple, not spotted ; calyx with acute tomentoee
 +
lobes and glabrous or glabrescent tube ; corolla rather gradually
 +
narrowed toward the base. Cent, and 8. W. China.—P. Fargesii, Franch.
 +
Tree, to 60 ft.: branchlets usually piloee: lvs. pubescent or
 +
glandular above, slightly pubescent beneath, entire or with few
 +
coarse teeth: fls. lavender or whitish, 2 1/2 in. long; calyx
 +
tomentose outside'- with triangular acutish lobes. W. China.—P.
 +
Fortunei, Hemsl. Tree, to 20 ft. : lvs. sub-coriaceous, densely
 +
tomentose below, ovate or ovate-oblong, to 10 in. long: fls. to 4 in.
 +
long, white, spotted purple inside; calyx 1 in. long, glabrous
 +
outside except the acutish lobes; corolla rather gradually narrowed
 +
toward the baee. S. E. China.—P. Silvestrii, Pampanini & Bonat. Small
 +
tree: lvs. densely brown-woolly, narrow, deeply cordate, 3-5 in.
 +
long: fls. in leafy panicles, sky-blue; calyx densely tomentose, with
 +
oblong obtusish lobes. Cent. China.—P. Thyrsodea, Rehd. Tree, to 20
 +
ft.: branchlcts and petioles piloee: lvs. ovate, usually truncate at
 +
the base, sparingly pubescent, often irregularly and remotely
 +
toothed, 4-6 in. long: fls. with the lvs., lavender, 1 1/2 in. long,
 +
in spike-like racemes forming terminal panicles about 1 ft. long;
 +
calyx tomentose, about 1/2in. long. Cent, and S. E. China.
 +
ALFRED REHDER.
 +
}}
 +
 
{{Taxonavigation|
 
{{Taxonavigation|
 
Domain|Eukaryota|
 
Domain|Eukaryota|
2,455

edits