Populus suaveolens

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Plant Characteristics
Origin: ?
Cultivation
Exposure: ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property.
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Scientific Names



Read about Populus suaveolens in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Populus suaveolens, Fisch. (P. balsamifera vars. suaveolens and intermedia, Loud.). A comparatively slow-growing tree of close, upright habit: young branches slightly pubescent above nodes: lvs. very thick and hard, finely serrate, oval to ovate and ovate-lanceolate in outline, and prominently whitened beneath, commonly rather small for this group, the margin ciliate, and finely crenate-serrate: twigs hard and cylindrical. Siberia, Mongolia, China. It is considered to be a valuable tree for hot and dry interior climates; and it also has distinct merit for ornamental planting. It eventually becomes a large tree. The Populus laurifolia and P. sibirica pyramidalis of some American nurserymen are apparently variations of this type. P. Przewalskii, Maxim., is probably a form of this with glabrous branchlets and petioles. P. szech- uanica, Schneid., a common tree in forests of Province Szechuan, W. China, growine to a large size: in habit andgeneral appearance resemblesP. suaveolens but the branchesare more massive and branchlets stouter: lvs.very large even on oldtrees, on suckers orvery strong shoots usually ovate - elongated and the base either slightly ordistinctly cor date or rounded and sharply glandular-crenate-dentate, on the old branches broad-ovate or ovate-orbicular with rounded or more or less cordate base and the margin more or less distinctly glandular-dentate. Growing at the Arnold Arboretum and the Rochester parks. P. yunnanensis, Dode, is allied to P. szechuanica but is insufficiently understood.

CH


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