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Few flowering plants self-pollinate; some can provide their own pollen (self fertile), but require a pollinator to move the pollen; others are dependent on cross pollination from a genetically different source of viable pollen, through the activity of pollinators. One of the possible pollinators to assist in cross-pollination are honeybees.
The American elm is a deciduous tree which, under ideal conditions, can grow to heights of 21 to 35 meters (69 to 115 feet). [3] The trunk may have a diameter at breast height (dbh) of more than 1.2 m (4 ft), supporting a high, spreading umbrella-like canopy.
After pollination, seeds of spring-flowering elms ripen and fall at the start of summer (June); they remain viable for only a few days. They are planted in sandy potting soil at a depth of 1 cm, and germinate in three weeks. Slow-germinating American elm will remain dormant until the second season. [12]
The starting-points for List of elm cultivars, hybrids and hybrid cultivars were fourfold: (1) Green's 'Registration of Cultivar Names in Ulmus ' (1964), [1] based on the contemporary nomenclature of elm species and wild hybrids; (2) Krüssmann's confirmation or correction of cultivar-names in his monumental Handbuch der Laubgehölze (1976); [2] (3) Heybroek's table of Netherlands research ...
A honey bee collecting nectar from an apricot flower.. The nectar resource in a given area depends on the kinds of flowering plants present and their blooming periods. Which kinds grow in an area depends on soil texture, soil pH, soil drainage, daily maximum and minimum temperatures, precipitation, extreme minimum winter temperature, and growing degre
Ulmus americana L. f. nigrescens Dieck. Accepted Name: Ulmus americana 'Nigricans' Ulmus americana f. pendula (Aiton) Fern. Accepted Name: Ulmus americana L. Ulmus americana f. viridis Seym. Accepted Name: Ulmus americana L. Ulmus americana L. 'Augustine Ascending' Accepted Name: Ulmus americana 'Augustine' Ulmus americana L. 'Brandon Ascending'
As implied by its name, the tree has a fastigiate, columnar form, [4] of almost equal width from the base to a top which is rather flat in appearance. [2] " The leaves differ from those of the common form," wrote Rehder (1922), "in being rather broad, measuring up to 7.5 cm. in width, very sharply and deeply doubly serrate, scabrous above, pilose on the veins and veinlets beneath and very ...
Ulmus americana var. floridana, the Florida elm, first described as Ulmus floridana by Alvan Wentworth Chapman in the 1860s, is smaller than the type, and occurs naturally in north and central Florida south to Lake Okeechobee. [1]