Ash tree
Oleaceae > |
Fraxinus > |
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Exposure: | ☼ | ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property. |
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Water: | ◍ | ?"?" is not in the list (wet, moist, moderate, dry, less when dormant) of allowed values for the "Water" property. |
Oleaceae > |
Fraxinus > |
Read about Ash tree in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture
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Fraxinus (ancient Latin name). Oleaceae. Ash. Interesting trees grown chiefly for their handsome pinnate leaves and some species also for the conspicuous panicles of white flowers. Deciduous: lvs. opposite, odd-pinnate, without stipules: fls. in panicles, dioecious or polygamous, with or without calyx or with calyx and a 2-6-parted corolla with generally linear segms.; stamens generally 2; ovary 2-celled: fr. a 1-seeded, winged samara.—About 50 species in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere south to Cuba; 16 of them occur in the U. S. The ashes are ornamental trees, most of them hardy, with rather large leaves and small flowers in panicles, either appearing before the leaves and greenish, or in the subgenus Ornus after or with leaves and whitish in showy panicles: the winged fruit is insignificant. They are valuable as street and park trees, and grow mostly into tall, pyramidal or broad-headed trees, with rather light green foliage, which turns yellow or dark purple in fall or remains green, as in F. excelsior and F. ornus. The ash is seldom severely injured, though a number of insects and fungi prey on the leaves and wood, of which two borers, and a fungus attacking the leaves are perhaps the most obnoxious. Most of the species are hardy North except those from the southern states, southern Europe and Himalayas; of the subgenus Ornus, F. bungeana and F. longicuspis seem to be the hardiest. The ashes are important forest trees, and the straight- grained and tough wood is much used for handles of tools, in the manufacture of carriages and wagons, for the interior finish of houses, and for furniture, for baskets and also for fuel. From F. Ornus manna is obtained as an exudation of the trunk, and some Chinese species, especially F. chinensis and F. mariesii, yield the Chinese white wax. The ashes grow in almost any moderately moist soil, F. nigra being somewhat more moisture-loving, while F. oxycarpa, F. ornus, F. syriaca and F. cuspidata grow well even in drier situations. They are usually readily transplanted and grow rapidly when young. Propagation is by seeds gathered in fall and sown immediately, or stratified and sown in spring, covered with about 1 inch of good soil; sometimes they remain dormant until the second year. The varieties and rarer kinds are budded in late summer or grafted in spring on the seedlings of any of the common species. CH
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Species
Selected specieswp:
- Ashes of eastern North America
- Fraxinus americana White Ash
- Fraxinus caroliniana Water Ash
- Fraxinus nigra Black Ash or Swamp Ash
- Fraxinus pennsylvanica Green Ash (also includes Red Ash)
- Fraxinus profunda (syn. F. tomentosa) Pumpkin Ash
- Fraxinus quadrangulata Blue Ash
- Ashes of western and southwestern North America
- Fraxinus anomala Single-leaf Ash
- Fraxinus cuspidata Fragrant Ash
- Fraxinus dipetala Two-petal Ash
- Fraxinus dubia
- Fraxinus gooddingii Goodding's Ash
- Fraxinus greggii Gregg's Ash
- Fraxinus latifolia Oregon Ash
- Fraxinus lowellii Lowell Ash
- Fraxinus papillosa Chihuahua Ash
- Fraxinus purpusii
- Fraxinus rufescens
- Fraxinus texensis Mountain Ash or Texas Ash
- Fraxinus uhdei Shamel Ash or Tropical Ash
- Fraxinus velutina Velvet Ash
- Ashes of the Western Palearctic (Europe, north Africa and southwest Asia)
- Fraxinus angustifolia Narrow-leafed Ash
- Fraxinus angustifolia var. oxycarpa (syn. F. oxycarpa) Caucasian Ash
- Fraxinus excelsior European Ash
- Fraxinus holotricha
- Fraxinus ornus Manna Ash or Flowering Ash
- Fraxinus pallisiae Pallis' Ash
- Ashes of the Eastern Palearctic (central & eastern Asia)
- Fraxinus apertisquamifera
- Fraxinus baroniana
- Fraxinus bungeana Bunge's Ash
- Fraxinus chinensis Chinese Ash or Korean Ash
- Fraxinus chiisanensis
- Fraxinus floribunda Himalayan Manna Ash
- Fraxinus griffithii Griffith's Ash
- Fraxinus hubeiensis
- Fraxinus lanuginosa
- Fraxinus longicuspis Japanese Ash
- Fraxinus malacophylla
- Fraxinus mandshurica Manchurian Ash
- Fraxinus mariesii Chinese Flowering Ash
- Fraxinus micrantha
- Fraxinus paxiana
- Fraxinus platypoda
- Fraxinus raibocarpa
- Fraxinus sieboldiana Japanese Flowering Ash
- Fraxinus spaethiana Späth's Ash
- Fraxinus trifoliata
- Fraxinus xanthoxyloides Afghan Ash
Read about Ash tree in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture
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{{{1}}} The above text is from the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. It may be out of date, but still contains valuable and interesting information which can be incorporated into the remainder of the article. Click on "Collapse" in the header to hide this text. |
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References
- Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963
External links
- w:Ash tree. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Ash tree QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)