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Ulmus crassifolia Nutt.
CEDAR ELM
Life   Plantae   Dicotyledoneae   Ulmaceae   Ulmus


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FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Botryosphaeriaceae  Diplodia @ BPI (1)
Dermateaceae  Cylindrosporium tenuisporum @ BPI (2)

Gloeosporium ulmeum @ BPI (1)
Erysiphaceae  Uncinula macrospora @ BPI (1)
Ganodermataceae  Ganoderma resinaceum @ BPI (2)
Gnomoniaceae  Gnomonia ulmea @ BPI (7)
Liceaceae  Licea pedicellata @ BPI (1)
Miridae  Hamatophylus guttulosus @ AMNH_PBI (1)
Polyporaceae  Lenzites betulina @ BPI (1)

Polyporus sanguineus @ BPI (1)

Trametes hydnoides @ BPI (1)

Trametes rigida @ BPI (1)
Sarcosomataceae  Urnula geaster @ BPI (1)
Septobasidiaceae  Septobasidium sydowii @ BPI (1)
Xylariaceae  Xylaria poitei @ BPI (1)
_  Pilophoropsidea camela @ AMNH_PBI (7)

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FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 3 | Ulmaceae | Ulmus

3. Ulmus crassifolia Nuttall, Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., n.s. 5: 169. 1837.

Cedar elm

Trees , 24-27 m; crowns rounded to narrow. Bark light brown with shallow ridges and large plates. Wood hard. Branches often with opposite corky wings; twigs reddish brown, pubescent. Buds brown, apex acute, pubescent; scales dark brown, shiny, glabrous. Leaves: petiole ca. 1.5 mm, pubescent. Leaf blade ovate to elliptic, 2.5-5 × 1.3-2 cm, base oblique or rounded to cuneate, margins crenate to doubly serrate, apex obtuse; surfaces abaxially softly pubescent, adaxially harshly pubescent. Inflorescences fascicles, 2-5-flowered, 0.5 cm; pedicel 0.75-1 cm. Flowers: calyx deeply lobed, more than 1/2 its length, lobes 6-9, hairy; stamens 5-6, anthers reddish purple; stigmas white, pubescent, exserted and spreading. Samaras green to tan, elliptic to oval, ca. 0.75-1. cm, pubescent, margins ciliate, cilia ca. 0.5 mm. Seeds somewhat thickened, not inflated. 2 n = 28.

Flowering late summer-early fall. Stream banks, low woods, low hillsides, roadsides, waste places; sometimes shade trees; 0-500 m; Ark., Fla., La., Miss., Okla., Tenn., Tex.; n Mexico.

Except for the Suwanee River valley in Florida, Ulmus crassifolia has not been found east of Webster County, Mississippi. It hybridizes with U . serotina .

SELECTED REFERENCES

McDaniel, S. 1967. Ulmus crassifolia in Florida. Sida 3: 115-116. Sherman-Broyles, S. L., S. B. Broyles, and J. L. Hamrick. 1992. Geographic distribution of allozyme variation in Ulmus crassifolia Nutt. Syst. Bot. 17: 33-41.

Updated: 2024-04-24 05:40:58 gmt
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