Ulmus minor 'Propendens'
Appearance
Ulmus minor | |
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Cultivar | 'Propendens' |
Origin | Europe |
The Field Elm cultivar Ulmus minor 'Propendens' is a comparatively rare cultivar, believed to have once been popular in eastern Europe. [2].[1]
Description
'Propendens' has branches wide-spreading and weeping, becoming corky when older; the leaves are small, 2–3 cm long.
Cultivation
Probably extinct; there are no known surviving specimens, although Green [1] treated U. × hollandica 'Rugosa Pendula' as a synonym, and a specimen under that name grows at the Morton Arboretum (Acc. no. 652-62). However, the tree in question more closely resembles the common U. × hollandica (see Gallery).
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Ulmus × hollandica 'Rugosa Pendula' leaves, Morton Arboretum, U.S.A.
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Ulmus × hollandica 'Rugosa Pendula', Morton Arboretum, U.S.A.
Synonymy
- Ulmus campestris var. microphylla pendula, A. Henry, Rehder
- Ulmus campestris var. suberosa alata, Hort.: Kirchner[3], in Petzold[4] & Kirchner, Arb. Muscav., 556, 1864.
- Ulmus campestris suberosa pendula Hort.: Späth[5], (Berlin, Germany), Catalogue 69, p. 9, 1887.
- Ulmus rugosa pendula Hort.: Kirchner[6], in Petzold[7] & Kirchner, Arb. Muscav., 556, 1864, as name in synonymy.
- Ulmus suberosa pendula: Audibert, (Tonnelle, Tarascon, France), Catalogue 2, p. 53, 1831-32.
References