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Acer grandidentatum, commonly called bigtooth maple or western sugar maple, [2] [3] is a species of maple native to interior western North America. It occurs in scattered populations from western Montana to central Texas in the United States and south to Coahuila in northern Mexico .
Paperbark maple (Acer griseum) Acer maximowiczianum leaves. Series Emeiensia. Acer sutchuenense Franch. Series Grisea. Acer griseum (Franch.) Pax – paperbark maple; Acer maximowiczianum Miq. – Nikko maple; Acer triflorum Komarov – three-flowered maple; Series Mandshurica. Acer mandshuricum Maxim. – Manchurian maple
Acer floridanum: Florida maple Aceraceae (maple family) Yes IUCN (LC) 311 Acer grandidentatum: bigtooth maple Aceraceae (maple family) Yes Yes IUCN (LC) 322 Acer leucoderme: chalk maple Aceraceae (maple family) Yes IUCN (LC) 323 Acer negundo: boxelder Aceraceae (maple family) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes IUCN (LC) 313 Acer pensylvanicum: striped ...
Field maple Acer campestre, in Ebsdorfergrund-Frauenberg, Hesse, Germany. Aceraceae were recognized as a family of flowering plants also called the maple family.They contain two to four genera, depending upon the circumscription, of some 120 species of trees and shrubs.
Acer negundo, also known as the box elder, boxelder maple, Manitoba maple or ash-leaved maple, is a species of maple native to North America from Canada to Honduras. [3] It is a fast-growing, short-lived tree with opposite, ash-like compound leaves.
The sugar maple is one of the most important Canadian trees, being, with the black maple, the major source of sap for making maple syrup. [23] Other maple species can be used as a sap source for maple syrup, but some have lower sugar content and/or produce more cloudy syrup than these two. [ 23 ]
Acer griseum, the paperbark maple or blood-bark maple, [3] is a species of flowering plant in the family Sapindaceae, native to central China. [4] Acer griseum is found in the Chinese provinces of Gansu , Henan , Hubei , Hunan , Shaanxi , Shanxi and Sichuan , at altitudes of 1,500–2,000 m (4,921–6,562 ft).
Amur maple is treated either as a subspecies of Acer tataricum (Tatar maple), [3] or as a distinct species in its own right, Acer ginnala. [2] [4] [5] The glossy, deeply lobed leaves of subsp. ginnala distinguish it from subsp. tataricum, which has matt, unlobed or only shallowly lobed leaves; it is separated from subsp. tataricum by a roughly 3,000 km range gap across central Asia.