<h1><SPAN name="p25" name="p25"></SPAN><span title="25" class="page"></span><SPAN name="ch_ii" name="ch_ii">Chapter II</SPAN></h1>
<h2>How To Identify Trees—(<span class="h2-continued">Continued</span>)</h2>
<h3><SPAN name="ch_ii-i" name="ch_ii-i">Group IV. The Larch And Cypress</SPAN></h3>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from other trees:</span> In summer the larch and cypress may
easily be told from other trees by their <em>leaves</em>. These are
needle-shaped and arranged in clusters with numerous leaves to each
cluster in the case of the larch, and feathery and flat in the case
of the cypress. In winter, when their leaves have dropped off, the
trees can be told by their cones, which adhere to the branches.</p>
<p>There are nine recognized species of larch and two of bald cypress.
The larch is characteristically a northern tree, growing in the
northern and mountainous regions of the northern hemisphere from the
Arctic circle to Pennsylvania in the New World, and in Central
Europe, Asia, and Japan in the Old World. It forms large forests in
the Alps of Switzerland and France.</p>
<p>The European larch and not the American is the principal species
considered here, because it is being planted extensively in this
country and in most respects is preferable to the American species.</p>
<p>The bald cypress is a southern tree of ancient origin, the
well-known cypress of Montezuma in the gardens of Chepultepec having
been a species of Taxodium. The tree is now confined to the swamps
and river banks of the <SPAN name="p26" name="p26"></SPAN><span title="26" class="page"></span> South Atlantic and Gulf States, where it
often forms extensive forests to the exclusion of all other trees.
In those regions along the river swamps, the trees are often
submerged for several months of the year.</p>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from each other:</span> In summer the larch may be told from
the cypress by its leaves (compare Figs. <SPAN href="#fig14" class="link">14</SPAN> and <SPAN href="#fig16" class="link">16</SPAN>). In winter the
two can be distinguished by their characteristic forms. The larch is
a broader tree as compared with the cypress and its form is more
conical. The cypress is more slender and it is taller. The two have
been grouped together in this study because they are both coniferous
trees and, unlike the other Conifers, are both deciduous, their
leaves falling in October.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig14-box"><SPAN name="fig14" name="fig14"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="219" height-obs="370" id="fig14-img" src="images/fig014.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 14.—Twig of the Larch in Summer.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 14</span>.—Twig of the Larch in Summer.</div>
</div>
<h4>The European Larch (<i class="binomial">Larix europaea</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> Its leaves, which are needle-shaped and about
an inch long, are borne in <strong>clusters</strong> close to the twig, <SPAN href="#fig14" class="link">Fig. 14</SPAN>.
There are many leaves to each cluster. This characteristic together
with the <strong>spire-like</strong> form of the crown will distinguish the tree at
a glance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> The leaves are of a light-green color but become darker in the
spring and in October turn yellow and drop off. The cypress, which
is described below, is another cone-bearing tree which sheds its
leaves in winter.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig15-box"><SPAN name="p27" name="p27"></SPAN><span title="27" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig15" name="fig15"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="401" height-obs="875" id="fig15-img" src="images/fig015.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 15.—Twig of the Larch in Winter.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 15</span>.—Twig of the Larch in Winter.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A medium-sized tree with a conical head and a straight
and tapering trunk. (See <SPAN href="#fig90" class="link">Fig. 90</SPAN>.)</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Central Europe and eastern and central United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Requires a deep, fresh, well-drained soil and needs
plenty of light. It flourishes in places where our native species
would die. Grows very rapidly.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The larch is subject to the attacks of a <em>sawfly</em>, which has
killed many trees of the American species. A <em>fungus</em> (<i class="binomial">Trametes
pini</i>) which causes the tree to break down with ease is another of
its enemies.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> A well-formed tree for the lawn. It is also useful
for group planting in the forest.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> Because its wood is strong and durable the larch is
valuable for poles, posts, railroad ties, and in shipbuilding.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig16-box"><SPAN name="p28" name="p28"></SPAN><span title="28" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig16" name="fig16"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="637" height-obs="737" id="fig16-img" src="images/fig016.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 16.—Twig of the Cypress.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 16</span>.—Twig of the Cypress.</div>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="p29" name="p29"></SPAN><span title="29" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>fruit</em> is a small cone about one inch long,
adhering to the tree throughout the winter.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig17-box"><SPAN name="fig17" name="fig17"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="340" height-obs="634" id="fig17-img" src="images/fig017.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 17.—The Bald Cypress.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 17</span>.—The Bald Cypress.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The tree is apt to be confused with the <em>American larch</em>,
also known as <em>tamarack</em> and <em>hackmatack</em>, but differs from it in
having longer leaves, cones twice as large and more abundant and
branches which are more pendulous.</p>
<p>The larch differs from the bald cypress in the broader form of its
crown and the cluster-like arrangement of its leaves. The twigs of
the bald cypress are flat and feathery. The larch and bald cypress
have the common characteristics of both shedding their leaves in
winter and preferring to grow in moist or swampy soils. The larch,
especially the native species, forms the well-known tamarack swamps
of the north. The bald cypress grows in a similar way in groups in
the southern swamps.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p30" name="p30"></SPAN><span title="30" class="page"></span>Bald Cypress (<i class="binomial">Taxodium distichum</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>feathery character</strong> of the <strong>twigs</strong>, Fig.
16, and the <strong>spire-like form</strong> of the tree, <SPAN href="#fig17" class="link">Fig. 17</SPAN>, which is taller
and more slender than the larch, will distinguish this species from
others.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig18-box"><SPAN name="fig18" name="fig18"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="639" height-obs="378" id="fig18-img" src="images/fig018.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 18.—Cypress “Knees.”]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 18</span>.—Cypress “Knees.”</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> The leaves drop off in October, though the tree is of the
cone-bearing kind. In this respect it is like the larch.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> Tall and pyramidal.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> The cypress is a southern tree, but is found under cultivation in
parks and on lawns in northern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Grows naturally in swamps, but will also do well in
ordinary well-drained, good soil. In <SPAN name="p31" name="p31"></SPAN><span title="31" class="page"></span> its natural habitat it sends
out special roots above water. These are known as “<em>cypress knees</em>”
(<SPAN href="#fig18" class="link">Fig. 18</SPAN>) and serve to provide air to the submerged roots of the
tree.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> None of importance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> An excellent tree for park and lawn planting.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is light, soft, and easily worked. It is used
for general construction, interior finish, railroad ties, posts and
cooperage.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> is thin and scaly. The <em>fruit</em> is a cone
about an inch in diameter. The general <em>color</em> of the tree is a
dull, deep green which, however, turns orange brown in the fall.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The cypress and the larch are apt to be confused,
especially in the winter, when the leaves of both have dropped. The
cypress is more slender and is taller in form. The leaves of each
are very different, as will be seen from the accompanying
illustrations.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="ch_ii-ii" name="ch_ii-ii">Group V. The Horsechestnut, Ash and Maple</SPAN></h3>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from other trees:</span> The horsechestnut, ash, and maple
have their branches and buds arranged on their stems <strong>opposite</strong> each
other as shown in Figs. <SPAN href="#fig20" class="link">20</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#fig22" class="link">22</SPAN> and <SPAN href="#fig24" class="link">24</SPAN>. In other trees, this
arrangement is <strong>alternate</strong>, as shown in <SPAN href="#fig19" class="link">Fig. 19</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell these three from each other.</span> If the bud is large—an inch to
an inch and a half long—dark brown, and <em>sticky</em>, it is a
<em>horsechestnut</em>.</p>
<p>If the bud is <em>not sticky</em>, much smaller, and <em>rusty brown to black</em>
in color, and the ultimate twigs, of an olive green color, are
<em>flattened</em> at points below the buds, it is an <em>ash</em>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig19-box"><SPAN name="p32" name="p32"></SPAN><span title="32" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig19" name="fig19"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="357" height-obs="821" id="fig19-img" src="images/fig019.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 19.—Alternate Branching (Beech.)]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 19</span>.—Alternate Branching (Beech.)</div>
</div>
<p>If it is not a horsechestnut nor an ash and its small buds have
many scales covering them, the specimen with branches and buds
opposite must then be a <em>maple</em>. Each of the maples has one
character which distinguishes it from all the other maples. For the
sugar maple, this distinguishing character is the <em>sharp point of
the bud</em>. For the silver maple it is the <em>bend in the terminal
twig</em>. For the red maple it is the <em>smooth gray-colored bark</em>. For
the Norway maple it is the <em>reddish brown color of the full, round
bud</em>, and for the box elder it is the <em>greenish color of its
terminal twig</em>.</p>
<p>The form of the tree and the leaves are also characteristic in each
of the maples, but for the beginner who does not wish to be burdened
with too <SPAN name="p33" name="p33"></SPAN><span title="33" class="page"></span> many of these facts at one time, those just enumerated
will be found most certain and most easily followed.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig20-box"><SPAN name="fig20" name="fig20"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="256" height-obs="718" id="fig20-img" src="images/fig020.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 20.—Opposite Branching (Horsechestnut.)]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 20</span>.—Opposite Branching (Horsechestnut.)</div>
</div>
<h4>The Horsechestnut (<i class="binomial">Æsculus hippocastanum</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>sticky</strong> nature of the <strong>terminal bud</strong> and
its <strong>large size</strong> (about an inch long). The bud is dark brown in
color. See <SPAN href="#fig20" class="link">Fig. 20</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Five to seven leaflets, usually seven. <SPAN href="#fig21" class="link">Fig. 21</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> Medium-sized tree, pyramidal head and coarse twigs.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Europe and eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Prefers a deep, rich soil.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The leaves are the favorite food of caterpillars and are
subject to a blight which turns them brown prematurely. The trunk is
often attacked by a disease which causes the flow of a slimy
substance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> On account of its showy flowers, the horsechestnut
is a favorite for the park and lawn.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p34" name="p34"></SPAN><span title="34" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is not durable and is not used commercially.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>flowers</em> appear in large white clusters in May
and June. The <em>fruit</em> is large, round, and prickly.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig21-box"><SPAN name="fig21" name="fig21"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="636" height-obs="472" id="fig21-img" src="images/fig021.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 21.—Leaf of the Horsechestnut.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 21</span>.—Leaf of the Horsechestnut.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>red horsechestnut</em> differs from this tree in having
red flowers. The <em>buckeye</em> is similar to the horsechestnut, but its
bud is not sticky and is of a lighter gray color, while the leaf
generally has only five leaflets.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p35" name="p35"></SPAN><span title="35" class="page"></span>The White Ash (<i class="binomial">Fraxinus americana</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The terminal <strong>twigs</strong> of glossy olive green
color are <strong>flattened</strong> below the bud. <SPAN href="#fig22" class="link">Fig. 22</SPAN>. The bud is
rusty-brown.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig22-box"><SPAN name="fig22" name="fig22"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="259" height-obs="494" id="fig22-img" src="images/fig022.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 22.—Twig of White Ash.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 22</span>.—Twig of White Ash.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Five to nine leaflets. <SPAN href="#fig23" class="link">Fig. 23</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A large tree with a straight trunk.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Rich, moist soil.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> In cities it is very often attacked by sucking insects.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The white ash grows rapidly. On account of its
insect enemies in cities, it should be used more for forest planting
and only occasionally for ornament.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> It has a heavy, tough, and strong wood, which is
valuable in the manufacture of cooperage stock, agricultural
implements, and carriages. It is superior in value to the black ash.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> is gray. The <em>flowers</em> appear in May.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The white ash is apt to be confused with the <em>black ash</em>
(<i class="binomial">Fraxinus nigra</i>), but differs from the latter <SPAN name="p36" name="p36"></SPAN><span title="36" class="page"></span> in having a
lighter-colored bud. The bud of the black ash is black. The bark of
the white ash is darker in color and the terminal twigs are more
flattened than those of the black ash.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig23-box"><SPAN name="fig23" name="fig23"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="478" height-obs="632" id="fig23-img" src="images/fig023.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 23.—Leaf of White Ash.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 23</span>.—Leaf of White Ash.</div>
</div>
<h4><SPAN name="p37" name="p37"></SPAN><span title="37" class="page"></span>Sugar Maple (<i class="binomial">Acer saccharum</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>bud is sharp-pointed</strong>, scaly, and
reddish brown. <SPAN href="#fig24" class="link">Fig. 24</SPAN>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig24-box"><SPAN name="fig24" name="fig24"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="305" height-obs="555" id="fig24-img" src="images/fig024.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 24.—Twig of the Sugar Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 24</span>.—Twig of the Sugar Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Has sharp points and round sinus. <SPAN href="#fig25" class="link">Fig. 25</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The crown is oval when the tree is young and round in old
age. <SPAN href="#fig26" class="link">Fig. 26</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Moist and deep soil, and cool, shady positions.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Subject to drouth, especially in cities. Is attacked by the
<em>sugar maple borer</em> and the <em>maple phenacoccus</em>, a sucking insect.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Its rich and yellow color in the fall, and the fine
spread of its crown make it a desirable tree for the lawn,
especially in the country.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> Its wood is hard and takes a good polish; used for
interior finish and furniture. The tree is also the source of maple
sugar. <SPAN href="#fig27" class="link">Fig. 27</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> is smooth in young trees and in old trees
it shags in large plates. The <em>flowers</em> appear in the early part of
April.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p38" name="p38"></SPAN><span title="38" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Other common names:</span> The sugar maple is sometimes called <em>rock maple</em> or
<em>hard maple</em>.</p>
<h4>Silver Maple (<i class="binomial">Acer saccharinum</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The tips of the <strong>twigs curve upwards</strong> (Fig.
28), the bark is scaly, and the leaves are very deeply cleft and are
silvery on the under side.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig25-box"><SPAN name="fig25" name="fig25"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="499" height-obs="485" id="fig25-img" src="images/fig025.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 25.—Leaf of Sugar Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 25</span>.—Leaf of Sugar Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Deeply cleft and silvery under side. <SPAN href="#fig29" class="link">Fig. 29</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A large tree with the main branches separating from the
trunk a few feet from the ground. The terminal twigs are long,
slender, and drooping.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p39" name="p39"></SPAN><span title="39" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Moist places.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The <em>leopard moth</em>, a wood-boring insect, and the
<em>cottony-maple scale</em>, a sucking insect.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig26-box"><SPAN name="fig26" name="fig26"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="486" height-obs="468" id="fig26-img" src="images/fig026.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 26.—The Sugar Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 26</span>.—The Sugar Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Grows too rapidly and is too short-lived to be
durable.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> Its wood is soft, weak, and little used.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> is light gray, smooth at first and scaly
later on. The scales are free at each end <SPAN name="p40" name="p40"></SPAN><span title="40" class="page"></span> and attached in the
center. The <em>flowers</em> appear before the leaves in the latter part of
March or early April.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig27-box"><SPAN name="fig27" name="fig27"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="431" height-obs="576" id="fig27-img" src="images/fig027.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 27.—Tapping the Sugar Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 27</span>.—Tapping the Sugar Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> The silver maple is sometimes known as <em>soft maple</em>
or <em>white maple</em>.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p41" name="p41"></SPAN><span title="41" class="page"></span>Red Maple (<i class="binomial">Acer rubrum</i>)</h4>
<div class="illustration" id="fig28-box"><SPAN name="fig28" name="fig28"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="230" height-obs="504" id="fig28-img" src="images/fig028.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 28.—Terminal Twig of Silver Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 28</span>.—Terminal Twig of Silver Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>bark is smooth and light gray</strong>, like
that of the beech, on the upper branches in older trees, and in
young trees over the whole trunk. <SPAN href="#fig30" class="link">Fig. 30</SPAN>. The buds are in clusters,
and the terminal twigs, <SPAN href="#fig31" class="link">Fig. 31</SPAN>, are quite red.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig29-box"><SPAN name="fig29" name="fig29"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="332" height-obs="306" id="fig29-img" src="images/fig029.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 29.—Leaf of the Silver Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 29</span>.—Leaf of the Silver Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Whitish underneath with three-pointed lobes. <SPAN href="#fig32" class="link">Fig. 32</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A medium-sized tree with a narrow, round head.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Prefers moist places.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Leaf blotches (<i class="binomial">Rhytisma acerinum</i>) which, however, are not
very injurious.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Suitable as a shade tree for suburban <SPAN name="p42" name="p42"></SPAN><span title="42" class="page"></span> streets. Its
rich red leaves in the fall make it attractive for the lawn.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig30-box"><SPAN name="fig30" name="fig30"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="407" height-obs="620" id="fig30-img" src="images/fig030.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 30.—Bark of the Red Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 30</span>.—Bark of the Red Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> Its wood is heavy, close-grained, and takes a good
polish. Used for furniture and fuel.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bud</em> is small, round, and red. The <em>flowers</em>
appear before the leaves are out in the early part of April.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig31-box"><SPAN name="p43" name="p43"></SPAN><span title="43" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig31" name="fig31"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="110" height-obs="573" id="fig31-img" src="images/fig031.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 31.—Twig of the Red Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 31</span>.—Twig of the Red Maple.</div>
</div>
<div class="illustration" id="fig32-box"><SPAN name="fig32" name="fig32"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="375" height-obs="352" id="fig32-img" src="images/fig032.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 32.—Leaf of the Red Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 32</span>.—Leaf of the Red Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> The red maple is sometimes known as <em>swamp maple</em>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig33-box"><SPAN name="fig33" name="fig33"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="62" height-obs="507" id="fig33-img" src="images/fig033.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 33.—Twig of Norway Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 33</span>.—Twig of Norway Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The red maple is apt to be confused with the silver maple,
but the latter can be distinguished by its turned-up twigs and scaly
bark over the whole trunk of the tree, which presents a sharp
contrast to the straight twig and smooth bark of the red maple. The
latter has a bark similar to the beech, but its branches are
<em>opposite</em>, while those of the beech are <em>alternate</em>.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p44" name="p44"></SPAN><span title="44" class="page"></span>Norway Maple (<i class="binomial">Acer platanoides</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The bud, <SPAN href="#fig33" class="link">Fig. 33</SPAN>, is <strong>oval and reddish-brown</strong>
in color; when taken off, a <strong>milky juice exudes</strong>. The bark is close.
<SPAN href="#fig34" class="link">Fig. 34</SPAN></p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig34-box"><SPAN name="fig34" name="fig34"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="269" height-obs="477" id="fig34-img" src="images/fig034.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 34.—Bark of Norway Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 34</span>.—Bark of Norway Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Like the leaf of the sugar maple but thicker in texture and darker
in color. <SPAN href="#fig35" class="link">Fig. 35</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A tall tree with a broad, round head.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Europe and the United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Will grow in poor soil.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Very few.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> One of the best shade trees.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> None.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> is close like that of the mockernut
hickory.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The Norway maple is apt to be confused with the <em>sycamore
maple</em> (<i class="binomial">Acer pseudoplatanus</i>), but differs from the latter in
having a reddish bud instead of a green bud, and a close bark
instead of a scaly bark.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p45" name="p45"></SPAN><span title="45" class="page"></span>Box Elder (<i class="binomial">Acer negundo</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The terminal <strong>twigs are green</strong>, and the buds
are round and small. <SPAN href="#fig36" class="link">Fig. 36</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Has three to seven leaflets.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig35-box"><SPAN name="fig35" name="fig35"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="572" height-obs="457" id="fig35-img" src="images/fig035.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 35.—Leaf of Norway Maple.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 35</span>.—Leaf of Norway Maple.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A medium-sized tree with a short trunk and wide-spreading
top.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern United States to the Rocky Mountains.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Grows rapidly in deep, moist soil and river valleys,
but accommodates itself to the dry and poor soil conditions of the
city.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig36-box"><SPAN name="p46" name="p46"></SPAN><span title="46" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig36" name="fig36"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="53" height-obs="569" id="fig36-img" src="images/fig036.jpg" title="[Illustration: Figure 36.—Twig of Box Elder.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption">Figure 36.—Twig of Box Elder.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Few.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Used as a shade tree in the Middle West, but the
tree is so ill formed and so short-lived that it is not to be
recommended.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> None. The wood is soft.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>bark</em> of the trunk is smooth and yellowish-green
in young trees and grayish brown in older specimens. The <em>flowers</em>
appear in the early part of April. The <em>fruit</em> takes the form of
yellowish-green keys which hang on the tree till late fall.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> The box elder is also commonly known as the
<em>ash-leaf maple</em>.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="ch_ii-iii" name="ch_ii-iii">Group VI. Trees Told by Their Form: Elm, Poplar, Gingko and Willow</SPAN></h3>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from other trees:</span> The trees described in this group are
so distinctive in their general <em>form</em> that they may, for the
purpose of study, be grouped together, and distinguished from all
other trees by this characteristic.</p>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from each other:</span> The American elm is <em>vase-like</em> in
shape; the Lombardy poplar is narrow and <em>spire-like</em>; the gingko,
or maidenhair tree, is <em>odd</em> in its mode of <em>branching</em>; and the
weeping willow is extremely <em>pendulous</em>.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p47" name="p47"></SPAN><span title="47" class="page"></span>American Elm (<i class="binomial">Ulmus americana</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The tree can be told at a glance by its
general branching habit. The limbs arch out into a wide-spreading
<strong>fan or vase-like crown</strong> which loses itself in numerous fine
drooping branchlets. See <SPAN href="#fig37" class="link">Fig. 37</SPAN>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig37-box"><SPAN name="fig37" name="fig37"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="628" height-obs="545" id="fig37-img" src="images/fig037.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 37.—American Elm.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 37</span>.—American Elm.</div>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="p48" name="p48"></SPAN><span title="48" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Leaf:</span> The leaves are simple, alternate, and from 2 to 5 inches long.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig38-box"><SPAN name="fig38" name="fig38"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="638" height-obs="623" id="fig38-img" src="images/fig038.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 38.—English Elm in Winter.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 38</span>.—English Elm in Winter.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> It is a tall tree with a trunk that divides a short
distance above ground. Its general contour, together with the
numerous branches that interlace its <SPAN name="p49" name="p49"></SPAN><span title="49" class="page"></span> massive crown, give the elm an
interesting and stately appearance which is unequaled by any other
tree.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig39-box"><SPAN name="fig39" name="fig39"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="337" height-obs="844" id="fig39-img" src="images/fig039.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 39.—Lombardy Poplar.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 39</span>.—Lombardy Poplar.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> The elm prefers a deep, rich and moist soil, but will
adapt itself even to the poor soil of the city street.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> <em>The leopard moth</em>, a wood-boring insect, and the <em>elm leaf
beetle</em>, a leaf-eating insect, are the two most important enemies of
the tree. Their ravages are very extensive.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The tree has a character of its own which cannot be
duplicated for avenue or lawn planting.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is strong and tough and therefore has a
special value for cooperage, agricultural implements, carriages, and
shipbuilding.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <SPAN name="p50" name="p50"></SPAN><span title="50" class="page"></span> <em>buds</em> are small, brown, and smooth, while those
of the European elms are covered with down. The <em>small side twigs</em>
come out at almost right angles to the larger terminal twigs, which
is not the case in other species of elm.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig40-box"><SPAN name="fig40" name="fig40"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="353" height-obs="539" id="fig40-img" src="images/fig040.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 40.—Leaf of Carolina Poplar.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 40</span>.—Leaf of Carolina Poplar.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> <em>White elm</em>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>English elm</em> (<i class="binomial">Ulmus campestris</i>) is also a tall,
dignified tree commonly seen under cultivation in America, but may
be told from the American species by the difference in their general
contour. The branches of the English species spread out but do not
arch like those of the American elm, and the bark of the English elm
is darker and coarser, <SPAN href="#fig38" class="link">Fig. 38</SPAN>. Little tufts of dead twigs along the
main branches and trunk of the tree are characteristic of the
English elm and will frequently help to distinguish it from the
American elm.</p>
<p>The <em>Camperdown elm</em> may be recognized readily by its dwarf size and
its low drooping umbrella-shaped crown.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p51" name="p51"></SPAN><span title="51" class="page"></span>Lombardy or Italian Poplar (<i class="binomial">Populus nigra, var. italica</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> Its <strong>tall, slender, spire-like form</strong> and
rigidly <strong>erect branches</strong>, which commence low on the trunk, make this
tree very distinct at all seasons of the year. See <SPAN href="#fig39" class="link">Fig. 39</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Triangular in shape, similar to that of the Carolina poplar but
smaller, see <SPAN href="#fig40" class="link">Fig. 40</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Asia, Europe, and North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> The poplar is easily grown in poor soil, in any
location, and is very hardy.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The tree has a distinctive form which makes it
valuable for special landscape effects. It is also used for shelter
belts and screening. Like all poplars it is short lived and will
stand pruning well.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> None.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig41-box"><SPAN name="fig41" name="fig41"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="449" height-obs="658" id="fig41-img" src="images/fig041.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 41.—Carolina Poplar.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 41</span>.—Carolina Poplar.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>Carolina poplar</em>, or Cottonwood (<i class="binomial">Populus deltoides</i>)
can be told from the Lombardy poplar by its wider crown and its more
open branching, <SPAN href="#fig41" class="link">Fig. 41</SPAN>. It may be recognized by its big terminal
twigs, which are light yellow in color and coarser than those of the
Lombardy poplar, <SPAN href="#fig42" class="link">Fig. 42</SPAN>. Its bark is smooth, light and
yellowish-green in young trees, and dark gray and fissured in older
specimens. Its large, conical, glossy, chestnut-brown bud is also
characteristic, <SPAN href="#fig42" class="link">Fig. 42</SPAN>. Its flowers, in the form of large catkins,
a peculiarity of all poplars, appear in the early spring. The
Carolina poplar is commonly planted in cities because it grows
rapidly and is able to withstand the smoke and drouth conditions of
the city. Where other trees, however, can be substituted with
success, the poplar should be avoided. Its very fast growth is
really a point <SPAN name="p52" name="p52"></SPAN><span title="52" class="page"></span> against the tree, because it grows so fast that it
becomes too tall for surrounding property, and its wood being
extremely soft and brittle, the tree frequently breaks in
windstorms. In many cases it is entirely uprooted, because it is not
a deep-rooted tree. Its larger roots, which spread <SPAN name="p53" name="p53"></SPAN><span title="53" class="page"></span> near the
surface, upset the sidewalk or prevent the growth of other
vegetation on the lawn, while its finer rootlets, in their eager
search for moisture, penetrate and clog the joints of neighboring
water and sewer pipes. The tree is commonly attacked by the
<em>oyster-shell scale</em>, an insect which sucks the sap from its bark
and which readily spreads to other more valuable trees like the elm.
The female form of this tree is even more objectionable than the
male, because in the early spring the former produces an abundance
of cotton from its seeds which litters the ground and often makes
walking dangerous. The only justification for planting the Carolina
poplar is in places where the conditions for tree growth are so poor
that nothing else will grow, and in those cases the tree should be
cut back periodically in order to keep it from becoming too tall and
scraggly. It is also desirable for screening in factory districts
and similar situations.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig42-box"><SPAN name="fig42" name="fig42"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="203" height-obs="670" id="fig42-img" src="images/fig042.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 42.—Bud of the Carolina Poplar.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 42</span>.—Bud of the Carolina Poplar.</div>
</div>
<p>The <em>silver</em> or <em>white poplar</em> (<i class="binomial">Populus alba</i>) may be told from the
other poplars by its characteristic smooth, <em>whitish-green bark</em>,
often spotted with dark blotches, <SPAN href="#fig43" class="link">Fig. 43</SPAN>. The <em>leaves are
silvery-white</em> and downy on the under side. The twigs are dark green
in color and densely covered with a white <SPAN name="p54" name="p54"></SPAN><span title="54" class="page"></span> down. It grows to very
large size and forms an irregular, wide-spreading, broad head, which
is characteristically different from that of any of the other
poplars.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig43-box"><SPAN name="fig43" name="fig43"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="629" height-obs="432" id="fig43-img" src="images/fig043.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 43.—Bark of the Silver Poplar.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 43</span>.—Bark of the Silver Poplar.</div>
</div>
<p>The <em>quaking aspen</em> (<i class="binomial">Populus tremuloides</i>), the <em>large-toothed
aspen</em> (<i class="binomial">Populus grandidentata</i>) and the <em>balsam poplar</em> or <em>balm of
Gilead</em> (<i class="binomial">Populus balsamifera</i>) are other common members of the
poplar group. The quaking aspen may be told by its reddish-brown
twigs, narrow sharp-pointed buds, and by its small finely toothed
leaves. The large-toothed aspen has thicker and rather downy buds
and broader and more widely toothed leaves. The balsam poplar has a
large bud thickly covered with a sticky, pungent, gelatinous
substance.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p55" name="p55"></SPAN><span title="55" class="page"></span>Gingko or Maidenhair Tree (<i class="binomial">Gingko biloba</i>)</h4>
<div class="illustration" id="fig44-box"><SPAN name="fig44" name="fig44"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="517" height-obs="545" id="fig44-img" src="images/fig044.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 44.—Gingko Trees.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 44</span>.—Gingko Trees.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>peculiar branches</strong> of this tree <strong>emerge
upward</strong> from a straight tapering trunk <strong>at an angle of about 45°</strong>
and give to the whole tree a striking, Oriental appearance, which is
quite different from that of any other tree, <SPAN href="#fig44" class="link">Fig. 44</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Like that of a leaflet of maidenhair fern, <SPAN href="#fig45" class="link">Fig. 45</SPAN>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p56" name="p56"></SPAN><span title="56" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Range:</span> A native of northern China and introduced into eastern North
America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> The gingko will grow in poor soils.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Practically free from insects and disease.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig45-box"><SPAN name="fig45" name="fig45"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="405" height-obs="569" id="fig45-img" src="images/fig045.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 45.—Leaves of the Gingko Tree.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 45</span>.—Leaves of the Gingko Tree.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> It makes a valuable tree for the street where heavy
shade is not the object and forms an excellent wide-spreading
specimen tree on the lawn.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>fruit</em> consists of a stone covered <SPAN name="p57" name="p57"></SPAN><span title="57" class="page"></span> by sweet,
ill-smelling flesh. The tree is dioecious, there being separate male
and female trees. The male tree is preferable for planting in order
to avoid the disagreeable odor of the fruit which appears on the
female trees when about thirty years old. The male tree has a
narrower crown than the female tree. The buds (<SPAN href="#fig46" class="link">Fig. 46</SPAN>) are very odd
and are conspicuous on the tree throughout the winter. The leaves of
the gingko shed in the winter. In this respect the tree is like the
larch and the bald cypress.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig46-box"><SPAN name="fig46" name="fig46"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="151" height-obs="545" id="fig46-img" src="images/fig046.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 46.—Bud of the Gingko Tree.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 46</span>.—Bud of the Gingko Tree.</div>
</div>
<p>The gingko belongs to the yew family, which is akin to the pine
family. It is therefore a very old tree, the remains of the forests
of the ancient world. The gingko in its early life is tall and
slender with its few branches close to the stem. But after a time
the branches loosen up and form a wide-spreading crown. In the
Orient it attains enormous proportions and in this country it also
grows to a fairly large size when planted on the open lawn or in
groups far apart from other trees so that it can have plenty of room
to spread. It then produces a picturesque effect of unusual
interest.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p58" name="p58"></SPAN><span title="58" class="page"></span>Weeping Willow (<i class="binomial">Salix babylonica</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> All the willows have a single cap-like scale
to the bud, and this species has an unusually <strong>drooping mass of
slender branchlets</strong> which characterizes the tree from all others,
<SPAN href="#fig47" class="link">Fig. 47</SPAN>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig47-box"><SPAN name="fig47" name="fig47"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="518" height-obs="600" id="fig47-img" src="images/fig047.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 47.—Weeping Willow.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 47</span>.—Weeping Willow.</div>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="p59" name="p59"></SPAN><span title="59" class="page"></span><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> It grows to large size.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Asia and Europe and naturalized in eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Prefers moist places near streams and ponds.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> None of importance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The weeping willow has a special ornamental effect
in cemeteries and along lakes and river banks in parks.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> It is used in the United States for charcoal and for
fuel.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>pussy willow</em> (<i class="binomial">Salix discolor</i>) may easily be told
from the other willows by its small size; it is often no higher than
a tall shrub. Its branches are <em>reddish green</em> and the buds are dark
red, smooth and glossy. The predominating color of the twigs and
buds in the pussy willow is therefore a shade of <em>red</em>, while in the
weeping willow it is <em>yellowish green</em>.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="ch_ii-iv" name="ch_ii-iv">Group VII. Trees Told by Their Bark or Trunk: Sycamore, Birch, Beech, Blue Beech, Ironwood, and Hackberry</SPAN></h3>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from other trees:</span> The <em>color of the bark or the form of
the trunk</em> of each of the trees in this group is distinct from that
of any other tree.</p>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from each other:</span> In the sycamore, the bark is
<em>mottled</em>; in the white birch, it is <em>dull white</em>; in the beech, it
is <em>smooth and gray</em>; in the hackberry, it is covered with numerous
<em>corky warts</em>; in the blue beech, the trunk of the tree is <em>fluted</em>,
as in <SPAN href="#fig54" class="link">Fig. 54</SPAN>, and in the ironwood, the bark <em>peels</em> in thin
perpendicular strips.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig48-box"><SPAN name="p60" name="p60"></SPAN><span title="60" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig48" name="fig48"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="512" height-obs="657" id="fig48-img" src="images/fig048.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 48.—Bark of the Sycamore Tree.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 48</span>.—Bark of the Sycamore Tree.</div>
</div>
<h4>The Sycamore or Plane Tree (<i class="binomial">Platanus occidentalis</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The peculiar <strong>mottled appearance</strong> of the
<strong>bark</strong> (<SPAN href="#fig48" class="link">Fig. 48</SPAN>) in the trunk and large branches is the striking
character here. The bark produces this <SPAN name="p61" name="p61"></SPAN><span title="61" class="page"></span> effect by shedding in large,
thin, brittle plates. The newly exposed bark is of a yellowish green
color which often turns nearly white later on. <strong>Round seed balls</strong>,
about an inch in diameter, may be seen hanging on the tree all
winter. In <SPAN name="p62" name="p62"></SPAN><span title="62" class="page"></span> this species, the seed balls are usually solitary, while
in the Oriental sycamore, a European tree similar to the native one,
they appear in clusters of two, or occasionally of three or four.
See <SPAN href="#fig49" class="link">Fig. 49</SPAN>.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig49-box"><SPAN name="fig49" name="fig49"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="509" height-obs="647" id="fig49-img" src="images/fig049.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 49.—Seed-balls of the Oriental Sycamore. Note one Seed-ball cut in half.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 49</span>.—Seed-balls of the Oriental Sycamore. Note one Seed-ball cut in half.</div>
</div>
<div class="illustration" id="fig50-box"><SPAN name="fig50" name="fig50"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="295" height-obs="639" id="fig50-img" src="images/fig050.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 50.—Gray or White Birch Trees.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 50</span>.—Gray or White Birch Trees.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> The stem of the leaf completely covers the bud. This is a
characteristic peculiar to sycamores.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A large tree with massive trunk and branches and a broad
head.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern and southern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Prefers a deep rich soil, but will adapt itself even
to the poor soil of the city street.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The sycamore is frequently attacked by a fungus (<i class="binomial">Gloeosporium
nervisequum</i>), which curls up the young leaves and kills the tips of
the branches. Late frosts also often injure its young twigs. The
Oriental sycamore, which is the European species, is more hardy in
these respects than the native one and is therefore often chosen as
a substitute.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The Occidental sycamore is now <SPAN name="p63" name="p63"></SPAN><span title="63" class="page"></span> planted very little,
but the Oriental sycamore is used quite extensively in its place,
especially as a shade tree. The Oriental sycamore is superior to the
native species in many ways. It is more shapely, faster growing, and
hardier than the native one. Both sycamores will bear transplanting
and pruning well.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig51-box"><SPAN name="fig51" name="fig51"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="373" height-obs="641" id="fig51-img" src="images/fig051.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 51.—Bark of the Black or Sweet Birch.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 51</span>.—Bark of the Black or Sweet Birch.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood of the sycamore is coarse-grained and hard to
work; used occasionally for inside finishing in buildings.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other names:</span> <em>Buttonball</em>, <em>buttonwood</em>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>Oriental sycamore</em> (<i class="binomial">Platanus orientalis</i>) an
introduced species, is apt to be confused with the Occidental
sycamore, but may be told from the latter by the number of seed
balls suspended from the tree. In the case of the Oriental species,
the seed balls hang in <em>pairs</em> or (rarely) three or four together.
<SPAN name="p64" name="p64"></SPAN><span title="64" class="page"></span> In the Occidental, the seed balls are generally <em>solitary</em> and very
rarely in pairs.</p>
<h4>Gray or White Birch (<i class="binomial">Betula populifolia</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>dull-white color of the bark</strong> on the
trunk and the <em>dark triangular patches below the insertion of the
branches</em> distinguish this tree; see <SPAN href="#fig50" class="link">Fig. 50</SPAN>. The bark of the young
trunks and branches is reddish-brown in color and glossy. The bark
adheres closely to the trunk of the tree and does not peel in loose,
shaggy strips, as in the case of the yellow or golden birch. It is
marked by small raised horizontal lines which are the lenticels or
breathing pores. These lenticels are characteristic of all birch and
cherry trees. In addition to the distinction in the color of the
bark, an important character which distinguishes the gray birch from
all other species of birch, is found in the <strong>terminal twigs</strong>, which
are <strong>rough</strong> to the touch.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A small tree. Frequently grows in clumps.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> The gray birch does best in a deep, rich soil, but
will also grow in poor soils.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The <em>bronze-birch borer</em>, a wood-destroying insect, and
<i class="binomial">Polyporus betulinus</i>, a fungus, are its chief enemies.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Its graceful habit and attractive bark gives the
tree an important place in ornamental planting. It may be used to
advantage with evergreens, and produces a charming effect when
planted by itself in clumps.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig52-box"><SPAN name="p65" name="p65"></SPAN><span title="65" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig52" name="fig52"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="520" height-obs="747" id="fig52-img" src="images/fig052.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 52.—Bark of the Beech.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 52</span>.—Bark of the Beech.</div>
</div>
<div class="illustration" id="fig53-box"><SPAN name="p66" name="p66"></SPAN><span title="66" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig53" name="fig53"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="359" height-obs="762" id="fig53-img" src="images/fig053.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 53.—Buds of the Beech Tree.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 53</span>.—Buds of the Beech Tree.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is soft and not durable. It is used in the
manufacture of small articles and for wood pulp.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>fruit is a catkin</em>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>paper birch</em> (<i class="binomial">Betula papyrifera</i>) is apt to be
confused with the gray birch, because both have a white bark. The
bark of the paper birch, however, is a clear white and peels off in
thin papery layers instead of being close. It very seldom shows any
dark triangular markings on the trunk. Its terminal twigs are not
rough and its trunk is usually straighter and freer from branches.</p>
<p>The <em>black</em> or <em>sweet birch</em> (<i class="binomial">Betula lenta</i>) has a bark similar to
the gray birch, except that its color is dark gray. See <SPAN href="#fig51" class="link">Fig. 51</SPAN>. The
twigs have an aromatic taste.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig54-box"><SPAN name="p67" name="p67"></SPAN><span title="67" class="page"></span><SPAN name="fig54" name="fig54"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="251" height-obs="718" id="fig54-img" src="images/fig054.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 54.—Trunk of Blue Beech.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 54</span>.—Trunk of Blue Beech.</div>
</div>
<div class="illustration" id="fig55-box"><SPAN name="fig55" name="fig55"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="321" height-obs="721" id="fig55-img" src="images/fig055.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 55.—Bark of the Ironwood.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 55</span>.—Bark of the Ironwood.</div>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="p68" name="p68"></SPAN><span title="68" class="page"></span> The <em>yellow birch</em> (<i class="binomial">Betula lutea</i>) has a yellowish or golden bark
which constantly peels in thin, ragged, horizontal films.</p>
<p>The <em>European white birch</em> (<i class="binomial">Betula alba</i>) has a dull-white bark
like the native white birch, but has smooth terminal twigs instead
of rough ones. It is commonly seen in the United States on lawns and
in parks.</p>
<h4>American Beech (<i class="binomial">Fagus americana</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>close-fitting, smooth, gray bark</strong> will
tell this tree from all others except the red maple and yellow-wood.
See <SPAN href="#fig52" class="link">Fig. 52</SPAN>. The red maple may then be easily eliminated by noting
whether the branches are alternate or opposite. They are alternate
in the beech and opposite in the maple. The yellow-wood may be
eliminated by noting the size of the bud. The <strong>bud</strong> in the
yellow-wood is hardly noticeable and of a golden yellow color, while
that of the beech is very <strong>long, slender, and sharp-pointed</strong>, and
chestnut brown in color. See <SPAN href="#fig53" class="link">Fig. 53</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> It grows tall in the woods, but on the open lawn spreads
out into a massive, round-headed tree.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern Canada and United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Prefers a rich, well-drained soil, but will grow in
any good soil.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> <em>Aphides</em> or plant lice that suck the sap from the leaves in
spring and early summer are the chief enemies of the tree.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The pleasing color of its bark, its fine spread of
branches, which gracefully droop down <SPAN name="p69" name="p69"></SPAN><span title="69" class="page"></span> to the ground, and its
autumnal coloring, make the beech a favorite for lawn and park
planting. The several European species of beech are equally
charming.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig56-box"><SPAN name="fig56" name="fig56"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="351" height-obs="540" id="fig56-img" src="images/fig056.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 56.—Bark of the Hackberry.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 56</span>.—Bark of the Hackberry.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is strong, close-grained, and tough. It is
used mainly for cooperage, tool handles, shoe lasts, chairs, etc.,
and for fuel.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>fruit</em> is a prickly burr encasing a sharply
triangular nut which is sweet and edible.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>European beech</em> (<i class="binomial">Fagus sylvatica</i>), and its weeping,
purple-leaved, and fern-leaved varieties, are frequently met with in
parks and may be told from the native species by its darker bark.
The weeping form may, of course, be told readily by its drooping
branches. The leaves of the European beeches are broader and less
serrated than those of the American beech.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p70" name="p70"></SPAN><span title="70" class="page"></span>Blue Beech or Hornbeam (<i class="binomial">Carpinus caroliniana</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>fluted</strong> or muscular effect of its
<strong>trunk</strong> will distinguish the tree at a glance, <SPAN href="#fig54" class="link">Fig. 54</SPAN>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Doubly serrated; otherwise the same as that of ironwood.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A low-spreading tree with branches arching out at various
angles, forming a flattened head with a fine, slender spray.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Very common in the eastern United States.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Grows in low wet woods.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> None of importance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> Its artistic branching and curious trunk give the
tree an important place in park planting.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> None.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The bark is smooth and bluish gray in color.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The blue beech or hornbeam is often confused with the
<em>ironwood</em> or <em>hop hornbeam</em> (<i class="binomial">Ostrya virginiana</i>). The ironwood,
however, has a characteristic bark that peels in perpendicular,
short, thin segments, often loose at the ends. See <SPAN href="#fig55" class="link">Fig. 55</SPAN>. This is
entirely different from the close, smooth, and fluted bark of the
blue beech. The color of the bark in the ironwood is brownish, while
that of the blue beech is bluish-gray. The buds of the ironwood are
greenish with brown tips, while the bud of the blue beech shows no
green whatever.</p>
<h4>Hackberry (<i class="binomial">Celtis occidentalis</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The tree may be told readily from other trees
by the <strong>corky tubercles</strong> on the bark of the lower portion of the
trunk. See <SPAN href="#fig56" class="link">Fig. 56</SPAN>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p71" name="p71"></SPAN><span title="71" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Leaf:</span> Has three predominating veins and is a bit more developed on one
side than on the other.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> A small or medium-sized tree with a single stem and broad
conical crown.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> United States and Canada.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> Grows naturally in fertile soils, but will adapt
itself to almost sterile soils as well.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The hackberry is usually free from disease, though often its
leaves are covered with insect galls.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> It is extensively planted as a shade tree in the
Middle West, and is frequently seen as an ornamental tree in the
East.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> It has little economic value except for fuel.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other characters:</span> The <em>fruit</em> is berry-like, with a hard pit. The fleshy
outer part is sweet.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> <em>Nettle tree</em>; <em>sugarberry</em>.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="ch_ii-v" name="ch_ii-v">Group VIII. The Oaks and Chestnut</SPAN></h3>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from other trees:</span> The oaks are rather difficult to
identify and, in studying them it will often be necessary to look
for more than one distinguishing character. The oaks differ from
other trees in bearing <em>acorns</em>. Their <em>leaves</em> have many lobes and
their upper lateral <em>buds</em> cluster at the top of the twigs. The
general contour of each oak presents a characteristic branching and
sturdiness uncommon in other trees.</p>
<p>The chestnut differs from other trees in bearing <em>burs</em> and its
<em>bark</em> is also distinctly characteristic.</p>
<p><span class="ha">How to tell them from each other:</span> There are two groups of oaks, the
<em>white oak</em> and the <em>black oak</em>. The white oaks mature their acorns
in one year and, therefore, <SPAN name="p72" name="p72"></SPAN><span title="72" class="page"></span> only acorns of the same year can be
found on trees of this group. The black oaks take two years in which
to mature their acorns and, therefore, young acorns of the present
year and mature acorns of the previous year may be found on the same
tree at one time. The <em>leaves</em> of the white oaks have rounded
margins and rounded lobes as in <SPAN href="#fig57" class="link">Fig. 57</SPAN>, while those of the black
oaks have pointed margins and sharp pointed lobes as shown in Figs.
<SPAN href="#fig60" class="link">60</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#fig62" class="link">62</SPAN> and <SPAN href="#fig64" class="link">64</SPAN>. The <em>bark</em> of the white oaks is light colored and
breaks up in loose flakes as in <SPAN href="#fig58" class="link">Fig. 58</SPAN>, while that of the black
oaks is darker and deeply ridged or tight as in Figs. <SPAN href="#fig59" class="link">59</SPAN> and <SPAN href="#fig61" class="link">61</SPAN>. The
white oak is the type of the white oak group and the black, red and
pin oaks are types of the other. For the characterization of the
individual species, the reader is referred to the following pages.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig57-box"><SPAN name="fig57" name="fig57"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="318" height-obs="470" id="fig57-img" src="images/fig057.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 57.—Leaf and Fruit of White Oak. (Quercus alba.)]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 57</span>.—Leaf and Fruit of White Oak. (Quercus alba.)</div>
</div>
<h4>White Oak (<i class="binomial">Quercus alba</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The massive ramification of its branches is
characteristic of this species and often an easy clue to its
identification. The <strong>bark</strong> has a <strong>light <SPAN name="p73" name="p73"></SPAN><span title="73" class="page"></span> gray color</strong>—lighter than
that of the other oaks—and breaks into soft, loose flakes as in
<SPAN href="#fig58" class="link">Fig. 58</SPAN>. The <strong>leaves are deeply lobed</strong> as in <SPAN href="#fig57" class="link">Fig. 57</SPAN>. The <strong>buds are
small, round and congested</strong> at the end of the year’s growth. The
acorns usually have no stalks and are set in shallow, rough cups.
The kernels of the acorns are white and palatable.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The white oak grows into a large tree with a
wide-spreading, massive crown, dissolving into long, heavy, twisted
branches. When grown in the open it possesses a short sturdy trunk;
in the forest its trunk is tall and stout.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig58-box"><SPAN name="fig58" name="fig58"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="345" height-obs="702" id="fig58-img" src="images/fig058.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 58.—Bark of White Oak. (Quercus alba.)]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 58</span>.—Bark of White Oak. (Quercus alba.)</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> The white oak thrives in almost any well-drained,
good, deep soil except in a very cold and wet soil. It requires
plenty of light and attains great age.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p74" name="p74"></SPAN><span title="74" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Enemies:</span> The tree is comparatively free from insects and disease except
in districts where the Gipsy moth is common, in which case the
leaves of the white oak are a favorite food of its caterpillars.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig59-box"><SPAN name="fig59" name="fig59"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="326" height-obs="432" id="fig59-img" src="images/fig059.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 59.—Bark of Black Oak. (Quercus velutina).]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 59</span>.—Bark of Black Oak. (Quercus velutina).</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The white oak is one of the most stately trees. Its
massive form and its longevity make the tree suitable for both lawn
and woodland planting but it is not used much because it is
difficult to transplant and grows rather slowly.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is of great economic importance. It is heavy,
hard, strong and durable and is used in cooperage, construction
work, interior finish of buildings and for railroad ties, furniture,
agricultural implements and fuel.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The <em>swamp white oak</em> (<i class="binomial">Quercus platanoides</i>) is similar to
the white oak in general appearance of the bark and form and is
therefore liable to be confused with it. It differs from the white
oak, however, in possessing a more straggly habit and in the fact
that the bark on the under side of its branches shags in loose,
large scales. Its buds are smaller, lighter colored and more downy
and its acorns are more pointed and with cups <SPAN name="p75" name="p75"></SPAN><span title="75" class="page"></span> more shallow than
those of the white oak. The tree also grows in moister ground,
generally bordering swamps.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig60-box"><SPAN name="fig60" name="fig60"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="438" height-obs="473" id="fig60-img" src="images/fig060.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 60.—Leaf and Fruit of Black Oak. (Quercus velutina).]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 60</span>.—Leaf and Fruit of Black Oak. (Quercus velutina).</div>
</div>
<h4>Black Oak (<i class="binomial">Quercus velutina</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>bark</strong> is black, rough and cut up into
firm <strong>ridges</strong> especially at the base of the tree, see <SPAN href="#fig59" class="link">Fig. 59</SPAN>. The
<em>inner bark</em> has a <em>bright yellow color</em>: the <strong>leaves</strong> have <em>sharp
points</em> and are wider at the base than at the tip as shown in Fig.
60. The buds are <em>large, downy</em> and <em>sharp pointed</em>. The acorns are
small and have <SPAN name="p76" name="p76"></SPAN><span title="76" class="page"></span> deep, scaly cups the inner margins of which are
downy. The kernels are yellow and bitter.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The tree grows in an irregular form to large size, with
its branches rather slender as compared with the white oak and with
a more open and narrow crown.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> It will grow in poor soils but does best where the
soil is rich and well drained.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> None of importance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The black oak is the poorest of the oaks for
planting and is rarely offered by nurserymen.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is heavy, hard and strong, but checks readily
and is coarse grained. It is of little value except for fuel. The
bark is used for tannin.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Other common names:</span> <em>Yellow oak</em>.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Comparisons:</span> The black oak might sometimes be confused with the <em>red</em>
and <em>scarlet oaks</em>. The yellow, bitter inner bark will distinguish
the black oak from the other two. The light-colored, smooth bark of
the red oak and the dark, ridged bark of the black oak will
distinguish the two, while the bark of the scarlet oak has an
appearance intermediate between the two. The buds of the three
species also show marked differences. The buds of the black oak are
covered with hairs, those of the scarlet oak have fewer hairs and
those of the red are practically free from hairs. The leaves of each
of the three species are distinct and the growth habits are
different.</p>
<h4>Red Oak (<i class="binomial">Quercus rubra</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>bark</strong> is perpendicularly fissured into
long, <em>smooth, light gray strips</em> giving the trunk <SPAN name="p77" name="p77"></SPAN><span title="77" class="page"></span> a characteristic
<strong>pillar effect</strong> as in Figs. <SPAN href="#fig61" class="link">61</SPAN> and <SPAN href="#fig94" class="link">94</SPAN>. It has the straightest trunk
of all the oaks. The leaves possess <em>more lobes</em> than the leaves of
any of the other species of the black oak group, see <SPAN href="#fig62" class="link">Fig. 62</SPAN>. The
acorns, the largest among the oaks, are semispherical with the cups
extremely shallow. The buds are large and sharp pointed, but not as
large as those of the black oak. They also have a few fine hairs on
their scales, but are not nearly as downy as those of the Black oak.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig61-box"><SPAN name="fig61" name="fig61"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="354" height-obs="655" id="fig61-img" src="images/fig061.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 61—Bark of Red Oak.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 61</span>—Bark of Red Oak.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The red oak is the largest of the oaks and among the
largest of the trees in the northern forests. It has a straight
trunk, free from branches to a higher point than in the white oak,
see <SPAN href="#fig94" class="link">Fig. 94</SPAN>. The branches are less twisted and emerge at sharper
angles than do those of the white oak.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p78" name="p78"></SPAN><span title="78" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Range:</span> It grows all over Eastern North America and reaches north farther
than any of the other oaks.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> It is less fastidious in its soil and moisture
requirements than the other oaks and therefore grows in a great
variety of soils. It requires plenty of light.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig62-box"><SPAN name="fig62" name="fig62"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="325" height-obs="462" id="fig62-img" src="images/fig062.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 62.—Leaf and Fruit of Red Oak.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 62</span>.—Leaf and Fruit of Red Oak.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> Like most of the other oaks, this species is comparatively free
from insects and disease.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The red oak grows faster and adapts itself better to
poor soil conditions than any of the other oaks and is therefore
easy to plant and easy to find in the nurseries. It makes an
excellent street tree, is equally desirable for the lawn and is
hardly surpassed for woodland planting.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is hard and strong but coarse grained, and is
used for construction timber, interior finish and furniture. It is
inferior to white oak where strength and durability are required.</p>
<h4><SPAN name="p79" name="p79"></SPAN><span title="79" class="page"></span>Pin Oak (<i class="binomial">Quercus palustris</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> Its method of <strong>branching</strong> will characterize
the tree at a glance. It develops a well-defined <em>main</em> ascending
<em>stem</em> with numerous <em>drooping</em> side <em>branches</em> as in <SPAN href="#fig63" class="link">Fig. 63</SPAN>. The
buds are very small and sharp pointed and the leaves are small as in
<SPAN href="#fig64" class="link">Fig. 64</SPAN>. The bark is dark, firm, smooth and in close ridges. The
acorn is small and carries a light brown, striped nut, wider than
long and bitter. The cup is shallow, enclosing only the base of the
nut.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig63-box"><SPAN name="fig63" name="fig63"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="261" height-obs="515" id="fig63-img" src="images/fig063.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 63.—Pin Oaks in Winter.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 63</span>.—Pin Oaks in Winter.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The pin oak is a medium-sized tree in comparison with
other oaks. It develops a tall, straight trunk that tapers
continuously through a pyramidal crown of low, drooping tender,
branches.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern North America.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> It requires a deep, rich, moist soil and grows
naturally near swamps. Its roots are deep and spreading. The tree
grows rapidly and is easily transplanted.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> None of importance.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The pin oak is an extremely graceful tree and is
therefore extensively used for planting on <SPAN name="p80" name="p80"></SPAN><span title="80" class="page"></span> lawns and on certain
streets where the tree can find plenty of water and where conditions
will permit its branches to droop low.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is heavy and hard but coarse grained and
liable to check and warp. Its principal use is in the construction
of houses and for shingles.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig64-box"><SPAN name="fig64" name="fig64"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="270" height-obs="468" id="fig64-img" src="images/fig064.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 64.—Leaf and Fruit of Pin Oak.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 64</span>.—Leaf and Fruit of Pin Oak.</div>
</div>
<h4>Chestnut (<i class="binomial">Castanea dentata</i>)</h4>
<p><span class="ha">Distinguishing characters:</span> The <strong>bark</strong> in young trees is smooth and of a
marked reddish-bronze color, but when the tree grows older, the bark
breaks up into <strong>diamond-shaped ridges</strong>, sufficiently characteristic
to distinguish the tree at a glance, see <SPAN href="#fig65" class="link">Fig. 65</SPAN>. A close
examination of the <em>terminal twig</em> will show <em>three ridges</em> and <em>two
grooves</em> running down along the stem from the base of each leaf or
leaf-scar. The twig has no true terminal bud. The fruit, a large,
round <strong>bur</strong>, prickly without and hairy within and enclosing the
familiar dark brown, sweet edible nuts is also a distinguishing mark
of the tree.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Leaf:</span> The leaves are distinctly long and narrow. They are from 6 to 8
inches long.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p81" name="p81"></SPAN><span title="81" class="page"></span><span class="ha">Form and size:</span> The chestnut is a large tree with a massive trunk and
broad spreading crown. The chestnut tree when cut, sprouts readily
from the stump and therefore in places where the trees have once
been cut, a group of two to six trees may be seen emerging from the
old stump.</p>
<div class="illustration" id="fig65-box"><SPAN name="fig65" name="fig65"></SPAN>
<ANTIMG class="illustration" width-obs="369" height-obs="597" id="fig65-img" src="images/fig065.jpg" title="[Illustration: Fig. 65.—Trunk of Chestnut Tree.]" alt="[Illustration]" />
<div class="caption"><span class="caption-fig-label">Fig. 65</span>.—Trunk of Chestnut Tree.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="ha">Range:</span> Eastern United States.</p>
<p><SPAN name="p82" name="p82"></SPAN><span title="82" class="page"></span>
<span class="ha">Soil and location:</span> It will grow on rocky as well as on fertile soils and
requires plenty of light.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Enemies:</span> During the past nine years nearly all the chestnut trees in the
United States have been attacked by a fungus disease (<i class="binomial">Diaporthe
parasitica</i>, Mur.) which still threatens the entire extinction of
the chestnut trees in this country. No remedy has been discovered
and all affected trees should be cut down and the wood utilized
before it decays and becomes worthless. No species of chestnut tree
is entirely immune from this disease, though some species are highly
resistant.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Value for planting:</span> The chestnut is one of the most rapidly growing
hardwood trees but, on account of its disease, which is now
prevalent everywhere, it is not wise to plant chestnut trees for the
present.</p>
<p><span class="ha">Commercial value:</span> The wood is light, not very strong and liable to warp.
It is durable when brought in contact with the soil and is therefore
used for railroad ties, fence-posts, poles, and mine timbers. It is
also valuable for interior finish in houses and for fuel. Its bark
is used in the manufacture of tanning extracts and the nuts are sold
in cities in large quantities.</p>
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