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Image:BigleafMaple 3158.jpg|Wings help disperse Bigleaf Maple seeds
Image:BigleafMaple 3158.jpg|Wings help disperse Bigleaf Maple seeds
Image:BigleafMapleBark_7532.jpg|Bigleaf Maple bark is often covered by moss
Image:BigleafMapleBark_7532.jpg|Bigleaf Maple bark is often covered by moss
Image:P1010016.JPG|Twisted bigleaf maple in Oregon
Image:Bigleafmaple_ferns.jpg|Bigleaf maple covered with ferns
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Revision as of 05:33, 21 March 2006

Bigleaf Maple
Bigleaf Maple foliage
Scientific classification
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A. macrophyllum
Binomial name
Acer macrophyllum

The Bigleaf Maple or Oregon Maple (Acer macrophyllum) is a large deciduous tree that grows to be up to 35 m tall and is native to western North America, mostly near the Pacific coast, from southernmost Alaska south to southern California. Some stands are also found inland in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains of central California, and a tiny population occurs in central Idaho.

Bigleaf Maple flowers and foliage

It has the largest leaves of any maple, typically 15-30 cm across, with five deeply-incised palmate lobes. The flowers are produced in spring in pendulous racemes 10-15 cm long, greenish-yellow with inconspicuous petals. The fruit is a paired winged samara, each seed 1-1.5 cm diameter with a 4-5 cm wing.

In the more humid parts of its range, as in the Olympic National Park, its bark is covered with epiphytic moss and fern species.

Bigleaf Maple trees are an abundant source for sap needed to make maple syrup.