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Acer saccharum, also known as sugar maple, is a deciduous tree native to eastern Canada and the eastern United States. It is the source of maple syrup, has colorful fall foliage, and is closely related to black maple and western sugar maple.
Learn about sugar maple (Acer saccharum), a native tree with good fall color and edible sap. Find out its height, spread, bloom time, culture, problems and uses.
Learn about northern sugar maple, a native deciduous tree that can be tapped for syrup and has showy fall color. Find out its description, cultivars, uses, and how to grow it in different regions of North Carolina.
Learn about the features, cultivation, and uses of Sugar Maple, a large, deciduous tree with spectacular fall color. Find out how to grow, prune, and propagate this native North American tree that produces maple syrup.
A comprehensive overview of sugar maple (Acer saccharum), a native hardwood species in eastern North America. Learn about its habitat, climate, soils, topography, associated forest cover, and silvicultural characteristics.
Acer saccharum is a perennial shrub or tree native to North America. It is also known as sugar maple, a source of maple syrup and sugar.
Learn about the characteristics, habitat, and conservation status of sugar maple, a common and emblematic tree of New England. Find out how to identify its leaves, bark, buds, and fruit, and see its distribution map and subspecies.
Acer saccharum. Common Name: sugar maple. Plant Functional Group: Deciduous broadleaf. Class > Order > Family: Magnoliopsida > Sapindales > Sapindaceae. What does the species look like? Sugar maple is a deciduous tree growing 50 to 130 feet tall.
Learn about the scientific name, size, identification, bark, leaf, fall color, growth rate, root system and disease of the Sugar Maple tree. The Sugar Maple is a popular tree for maple syrup production and has a medium to slow growth rate.
Sugar maple (Acer saccharum) is a large tree native to eastern North America, with sweet sap that can be made into syrup and sugar. Learn about its description, varieties, leaf emblem, and wood grain patterns.