Associations
provided by BioImages, the virtual fieldguide, UK
In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Aurantiporus fissilis is saprobic on large, dead, standing trunk of Liriodendron tulipifera
Foodplant / saprobe
scattered, long covered by periodem which is the raised and perforated pycnidium of Phomopsis coelomycetous anamorph of Phomopsis liriodendri is saprobic on dead branch of Liriodendron tulipifera
Remarks: season: 3,6,7
Comments
provided by eFloras
Leaf and flower color variation are widespread in this species, but the variation is continuous and without any discernible taxonomic significance.
Liriodendron tulipifera is widely cultivated; a few cultivars have been introduced to horticulture, and the hybrid L. tulipifera × L. chinense is known. Liriodendron tulipifera is reported to have escaped from cultivation in Texas, but I have seen no specimens. The specimens from Barry and Ozark counties, Missouri, may not be indigenous.
Liriodendron tulipifera is the state tree of both Indiana and Tennessee.
Native American tribes used Liriodendron tulipifera for making canoes. Cherokee and Rappahannock tribes used bark of the roots as a bitter tonic and heart stimulant, and it was considered useful in healing fevers, rheumatism, and digestive disorders (D. E. Moerman 1986).
The largest known tree of Liriodendron tulipifera , 44.5 m in height with a trunk diameter of 3.02 m, is recorded from Bedford, Virginia (American Forestry Association 1994).
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Description
provided by eFloras
Trees , single-trunked, to 45 m. Bark light gray, thick, deeply furrowed. Stipules paired, light green, elliptic to oblanceolate, 20-45mm; petiole 5-11.5 cm. Leaf blade commonly with 2 shallow upper lobes and 2 lateral lobes at broadest part, or sometimes squarrose and barely lobed, (6.5-)7.5-15(-23.5) × (8.5-)12.5-18.5(-25.5) cm; surfaces abaxially glaucous, adaxially bright green. Flowers campanulate; spathaceous bract 1, brownish, notched; tepals erect, adaxial orange blotch sometimes gummy, outermost tepals green to glaucous; stamens 20-50, 40-50 mm; filaments white; pistils 60-100. Samaracetums 4.5-8.5 cm, with numerous (1-)2-seeded, imbricate samaras 3-5.5 × 0.5-1 cm, falling separately at maturity; receptacles with basal pistil persistent. Seeds (1-)2. 2 n =38.
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Distribution
provided by eFloras
Ont.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Fla., Ga., Ill., Ind., Ky., La., Md., Mass., Mich., Miss., Mo., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va.
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Flowering/Fruiting
provided by eFloras
Flowering spring.
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Habitat
provided by eFloras
Rich woodlands, bluffs, low mountains, and hills; 0-1500m.
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Synonym
provided by eFloras
Liriodendron procera Salisbury; Tulipifera liriodendron Miller
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Distribution
provided by EOL authors
Some historical information regarding the distribution of L. tulipifera in the Eastern U.S. can be found in Silvics of North America.
Tulip Poplar Benefits
provided by EOL authors
Fast-Growing
Unique spring flowers
Yellow fall color
Common Names
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the term:
treetuliptree
blue-poplar
tulip-poplar
yellow-poplar
yellow wood
TAXONOMY:
The scientific name of tuliptree is Liriodendron tulipifera L. (Magnoliaceae)
[
30].
LIFE FORM:
Tree
FEDERAL LEGAL STATUS:
No special status
OTHER STATUS:
NO ENTRY
DISTRIBUTION AND OCCURRENCE
SPECIES: Liriodendron tulipifera
GENERAL DISTRIBUTION:
Tuliptree occurs in eastern North America. The species ranges from
Vermont, west through southern Ontario and Michigan, south to Louisiana,
and east to northern Florida [
1,
2].
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Distribution
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
Tuliptree occurs in eastern North America. The species ranges from
Vermont, west through southern Ontario and Michigan, south to Louisiana,
and east to northern Florida [
1,
2].
Distribution of tuliptree. Map courtesy of USDA, NRCS. 2018. The
PLANTS Database.
National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC [2018, June 11] [
30].
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Life Form
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the term:
treeTree
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Management considerations
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms:
forest,
litter,
root collar,
root crown,
seed,
seed tree,
treeInsects: Compared with other commercial species, tuliptree is
relatively free of pests. Only four insect species have important
impact on harvest. Tuliptree scale (Toumeyella liriodendri) and
tuliptree weevil (Odontopus calceatus) feed on the buds and stems.
Root collar borer (Euzophera ostricolorella) and Columbian timber beetle
(Corthtlus columbianus) bore into the bole and root crown, providing
pathways for other pathogens to enter the tree. The Columbian timber
beetle also lowers lumber grade by creating a large black streak above
and below beetle burrow entries [
1,
2,
24].
Silviculture: Clearcutting is the recommended harvest method for
tuliptree. Its seeds survive for 4 to 8 years on the forest floor,
making seed tree cuts unnecessary [
6]. When tuliptree is harvested
in warm seasons, the wood is susceptible to a wood-staining fungi
(Ceratocystis spp.) which lowers the lumber grade. Rapid processing of
the logs in warm seasons reduces monetary losses from staining [
2].
Season of harvest can have an impact on establishment and growth of
tuliptree seedlings. In stands logged in late spring or summer,
seeds may not germinate until the following year; these seedlings may
not be able to compete with vegetation started the previous year.
However, where a good seed source was previously present, summer
cuttings usually produce an adequate number of seedlings. If the seed
supply in the litter is scarce, fall, winter, or early spring harvesting
may aid in seedling establishment [
2].
Tuliptree is shade intolerant and responds well to overstory
thinning. Tuliptree was four times taller and five times larger in
dbh in an 18-year-old stand where all the overstory vegetation had been
removed than in the control [
2]. Lamson [
18] has provided information
on thinning. Tuliptree responds well to fertilization. It grew
twice as tall on sites fertilized with diammonium phosphate at a rate of
500 pounds per acre (562 kg/ha) than on control sites [
10].
Pollution: Tuliptree is very sensitive to high ozone concentrations [
8].
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Phenology
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info on this topic. Yellow poplar flowers from April to June; seeds mature from August to
late October. Peak samara dispersal is from October to November, with a
few falling as late as March [
2,
26].
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Post-fire Regeneration
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms:
ground residual colonizer,
root sucker,
secondary colonizerTree with adventitious-bud root crown/soboliferous species root sucker
Ground residual colonizer (on-site, initial community)
Secondary colonizer - off-site seed
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Taxonomy
provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
The scientific name of tuliptree is Liriodendron tulipifera L. (Magnoliaceae)
[
30].
- bibliographic citation
- Griffith, Randy Scott. 1991. Liriodendron tulipifera.In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/
Associated Forest Cover
provided by Silvics of North America
Yellow-poplar is a major species in four forest cover types
(Society of American Foresters) (14): yellow-poplar (Type 57),
Yellow-Poplar-Eastern Hemlock (Type 58), Yellow-Poplar-White
Oak-Northern Red Oak (Type 59), and Sweetgum-Yellow-Poplar (Type
87). It is a minor species in 11 types: Eastern White Pine (Type
21), White Pine-Hemlock (Type 22), White Pine-Chestnut Oak (Type
51), White Oak-Black Oak-Northern Red Oak (Type 52), White Oak
(Type 53), Northern Red Oak (Type 55), Beech-Sugar Maple (Type
60), Sassafras-Persimmon (Type 64),
Loblolly Pine (Type 81), Loblolly Pine-Hardwood (Type 82), and
Swamp Chestnut Oak-Cherrybark Oak (Type 91).
On bottom lands and on the better drained soils of the Coastal
Plain, yellow-poplar grows in mixture with the tupelos (Nyssa
spp.), baldcypress (Taxodium distichum), oaks Quercus
spp.), red maple (Acer rubrum), sweetgum (Liquidambar
styraciflua), and loblolly pine (Pinus taeda). In the
Piedmont, associated species include oaks, sweetgum, blackgum
(Nyssa sylvatica), red maple, loblolly pine, shortleaf
pine (Pinus echinata), Virginia pine (P virginiana),
hickories (Carya spp.), flowering dogwood (Cornus
florida), sourwood (Oxydendrum arboreum), and
redcedar (Juniperus virginiana).
At lower elevations in the Appalachian Mountains, yellow-poplar is
found with black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia), white
pine (Pinus strobus), eastern hemlock (Tsuga
canadensis), hickories, white oak (Quercus alba), other
oaks, black walnut (Juglans nigra), yellow pines,
flowering dogwood, sourwood, sweet birch (Betula lenta), blackgum,
basswood (Tilia americana), and Carolina silverbell (Halesia
carolina). At higher elevations, associated species include
northern red oak (Quercus rubra), white ash (Fraxinus
americana), black cherry (Prunus serotina), cucumber
tree (Magnolia acuminata), yellow buckeye (Aesculus
octandra), American beech (Fagus grandifolia), sugar
maple (Acer saccharum), and yellow birch (Betula
alleghaniensis). Trees associated with yellow-poplar in
nonmountainous areas of the North and Midwest include white oak,
black oak Quercus velutina), northern red oak, ash,
beech, sugar maple, blackgum, dogwood, and hickories.
Pure stands of yellow-poplar occupy only a small percentage of the
total land within the range of the species, but they are usually
on productive sites that include some of the most valuable
timber-producing forests in eastern North America. It has been
repeatedly observed in the southern Appalachians that the
percentage of yellow-poplar increases noticeably with increasing
quality of the site. Where yellow-poplar grows in pure, or nearly
pure, stands on medium and lower quality sites, it probably
originated on abandoned old fields.
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Climate
provided by Silvics of North America
Because of its wide geographic distribution, yellow-poplar grows
under a variety of climatic conditions. Low temperature extremes
vary from severe winters in southern New England and upper New
York with a mean January temperature of -7.2° C (19° F)
to almost frost-free winters in central Florida with a mean
January temperature of 16.1° C (61° F). Average July
temperature varies from 20.6° C (69° F) in the northern
part of the range to 27.2° C (81° F) in the southern.
Rainfall in the range of yellow-poplar varies from 760 mm (30 in)
to more than 2030 mm (80 in) in some areas of the southern
Appalachians. Average number of frost-free days varies from 150
to more than 310 days within the north-to-south range of
yellow-poplar.
Effects of temperature and moisture extremes are tempered somewhat
by local topography. At the northern end of its range,
yellow-poplar is usually found in valleys and stream bottoms at
elevations below 300 m (1,000 ft). In the southern Appalachians,
it may grow on a variety of sites, including stream bottoms,
coves, and moist slopes up to an elevation of about 1370 m (4,500
ft). Toward the southern limit of the range, where high
temperatures and soil moisture probably become limiting, the
species usually is confined to moist, but well-drained, stream
bottoms. Optimum development of yellow-poplar occurs where
rainfall is well distributed over a long growing season.
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Damaging Agents
provided by Silvics of North America
Yellow-poplar is unusually free from
damage by pests compared with many other commercially important
species. While more than 30 species of insects attack
yellow-poplar, only 4 species are considered to have significant
economic impact (8). The tuliptree scale (Toumeyella
liriodendri) causes loss of vigor by removing large
quantities of phloem sap. Scale attacks often kill leaders of
seedlings and saplings causing them to be overtopped by
competitors. The yellow-poplar weevil (Odontopus calceatus)
feeds on buds and foliage and may occur in outbreaks over
large areas. The rootcollar borer (Euzophera ostricolorella)
attacks the phloem tissue at the base of the tree and
provides entry points for rots and other pathogens. Attacks by
the Columbian timber beetle (Corthylus columbianus) do
not kill the tree but may degrade the wood. The defect consists
of black-stained burrows and discolored wood called "calico
poplar."
Fire scars, logging damage, animal and bird damage, top breakage,
dying limbs, and decaying parent stumps all provide entry for
decay-causing fungi (16). Probably the most common type of decay
associated with basal wounding and decaying stumps is a soft,
spongy, white or gray rot caused by the fungus Armillaria
mellea. A white heartwood rot caused by Collybia
velutipes often is associated with top breakage and dying
limbs. Species of the genus Nectria have been associated
with stem cankers. Incidence of this disease and mortality from
it was greatest on low-vigor trees.
A canker caused by Fusarium solani was isolated from large
yellow-poplars in Ohio and was shown to cause characteristic
cankers through pathogenicity studies. Some mortality results
during periods of drought, but F solani apparently is not
a virulent pathogen and causes damage only when the host is
weakened by unfavorable environmental factors.
Dieback and associated stem canker of yellow-poplar saplings were
reported to have resulted in considerable mortality in some
stands. A fungus of the genus Myxosporium was associated
with dead bark of infected trees and was shown to cause canker
formation after experimental inoculations. Identical dieback
symptoms were reported for scattered areas throughout the South.
Symptoms included chlorosis of leaves, sparse crown, dieback,
trunk and branch cankers, and epicormic sprouting. Several fungal
species were consistently isolated from cankered trees, but there
was uncertainty about the causative agent. The severity and
extent of infection are greater in upland sites than in
bottom-land sites. All canker-forming diseases reported for
yellow-poplar appear to be confined to, or most severe on, trees
that are low in vigor because of drought, poor site, or
competition.
A nursery root-rot disease caused by Cylindrocladium scoparium
causes root and stem lesions. It is frequently lethal in
nursery beds and causes low survival and poor growth when
infected seedlings are outplanted. Extensive root damage and
mortality in a 27-year-old yellow-poplar plantation have been
reported.
Yellow-poplar logs, especially when cut in warmer seasons, are
subject to rapid deterioration because of attacks of
wood-staining fungi that feed largely on the starch and sugars in
the green sapwood and penetrate deeply while the wood is moist.
The most common rapid-staining species is Ceratocystis
pluriannulata.
Yellow-poplar seedlings and saplings have thin bark and are
extremely susceptible to fire damage.
Even a light ground fire is usually fatal to small stems up to 2.5
cm (1 in) in diameter. These stems resprout after fire, but
repeated fires may eliminate yellow-poplar from a site. When the
bark becomes thick enough to insulate the cambium (about 1.3 cm;
0.5 in), yellow-poplar becomes extremely fire resistant.
Sleet and glaze storms, which occur periodically within the range
of yellow-poplar, may cause considerable damage. Stump sprouts
are particularly susceptible to injury, slender trees may be
broken off, and tops of dominant and codominant trees are often
broken. Top damage is often the point of entry for fungi.
Although yellow-poplar usually makes remarkable recovery after
such storms, repeated damage can result in a growth reduction and
loss of quality.
The leaves, twigs, and branches of yellow-poplar are tender and
palatable to livestock and white-tailed deer, and young trees are
often heavily browsed. Seedlings are grazed to the ground, small
saplings are trimmed back, and even large saplings may be ridden
down and severely damaged. In areas where animals are
concentrated, young yellow-poplar is frequently eliminated.
Rabbits also eat the bark and buds of seedlings and saplings and
can be quite destructive at times.
When the sap is running in the spring, yellow-poplar is very
susceptible to logging damage. If a falling tree strikes a
standing poplar, there is often considerable bark loss up and
down the bole of the standing tree. Even if the bark appears only
lightly bruised, it may subsequently dry up and fall off in long
strips.
Frost, especially in frost pockets, can affect the early growth
and development of yellow-poplar. Following a late spring frost
in a 20-year-old plantation, it was found that leaf mortality
varied from 5 to 100 percent of the leaves on the individual
trees. Leaf mortality was lowest on trees with a high foliar
content of potassium. Frost may also cause bole damage in the
form of shake, a separation of growth rings resulting in cull. A
weather-induced defect called blister shake, related to frost
shake, was described in 30-year-old yellow-poplar trees in West
Virginia.
Vines can be extremely damaging to yellow-poplar. Japanese
honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica), kudzu (Pueraria
lobata), and climbing bittersweet (Celastrus scandens)
have been known to have deleterious effects on yellow-poplar
in isolated cases. However, the most widespread damage throughout
the Appalachians results from wild grapevines (Vitis spp.)
(36,41), particularly on good sites that have been regenerated
naturally by clearcutting. Many forest managers and researchers
consider grape the most serious threat to production of
high-quality yellow-poplar timber in the Appalachian region.
Grapevines damage young trees by breaking limbs and tops,
twisting and bending the main stem, and intercepting solar
radiation. The result is reduced growth, malformation of stem and
crown, and sometimes death of the trees. Grapevines also worsen
winter storm damage in some areas by furnishing increased surface
area for accumulation of ice and snow.
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Flowering and Fruiting
provided by Silvics of North America
Yellow-poplar has a singly
occurring, perfect flower 4 to 5 cm wide (1.5 to 2 in), with six
petals varying in color from a light yellowish green at the
margin to a deep orange band at the center. Yellow-poplars
usually produce their first flowers at 15 to 20 years of age and
may continue production for 200 years (29,31). Flowering occurs
from April to June depending on location and weather conditions.
The flowering period for each tree varies from 2 to 6 weeks
depending on the size and age of the tree and number of flowers
per tree. Pollination must occur soon after the flowers open
while the stigmas are light colored and succulent; brown stigmas
are no longer receptive to pollen. Normally the receptive period
is only 12 to 24 daylight hours. Insects are important
pollinators; flies, beetles, honey bees, and bumble bees (in
decreasing order of abundance) were observed on opened flowers.
However, uncontrolled insect pollinations do not result in
effective pollination of all stigmas, and a great deal of selfing
occurs (7). Higher percentages of filled seed result from
cross-pollination and crosses among widely separated trees (37).
By controlled cross-pollination, as many as 90-percent filled
seed per cone was obtained; the highest percentage for an
open-pollinated tree was 35 percent. Cross-pollinated seedlings
tended to be more vigorous than seedlings obtained from open
pollination.
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Genetics
provided by Silvics of North America
Population Differences
The significant variation in many traits among individual trees,
among stands, and between geographic sources of yellow-poplar
(15,29,34) is of interest to forest managers and users of wood
products.
Varying degrees of genetic control have been demonstrated for wood
and tree properties such as specific gravity and fiber length;
straightness; branch angle; natural pruning ability; leaf, fruit,
and seed characteristics; disease resistance; growth of
seedlings; and length of growing season. For other important
traits, such as the tendency to produce epicormic sprouts,
evidence exists that the trait is strongly inherited although
this has not yet been demonstrated conclusively.
A growth chamber study revealed that seedlings of northern and
southern origin responded very differently to day-length
treatments (43). A day length of 18 hours inhibited the northern
source but not the southern. The most consistent difference among
geographic seed sources has appeared in dormancy relationships.
In general, the more northern sources start growth later and
cease earlier than the more southern sources. Few studies are old
enough to permit good comparisons of volume differences for
different seed sources, but significant differences in early
height growth have been reported.
While most geographic differences are associated with latitude of
source, there are good indications that environmental differences
associated with altitude are also important. In North Carolina, a
clinal pattern of variation existed from coast to mountain for a
number of seed and leaf characteristics (19).
Races
At least one distinct ecotype of yellow-poplar has been confirmed.
First evidence came from a plantation near Charleston, SC, where
trees from a Coastal Plain source in eastern North Carolina were
twice as tall 3 years after outplanting as those from a mountain
source in western North Carolina (29). Later, a source from the
Coastal Plain of North Carolina performed poorly in comparison to
upland sources when planted at a Piedmont location but was far
superior to upland sources when planted on organic soils of the
Coastal Plain where pH values seldom exceed 4.0 (19).
Yellow-poplar of the coastal source has a distinctive leaf
pattern and color-rounded lobes and copperish-red leaves. It is
apparently adapted to the highly acidic, water-saturated organic
soils of the Coastal Plain and is able to withstand periodic
inundation without harm (32). Sources with the distinctive leaf
characteristics have been found as far south as Florida.
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Growth and Yield
provided by Silvics of North America
The mature yellow-poplar has a striking
appearance. In forest stands its trunk is very straight, tall,
and clear of lateral branches for a considerable height. It is
among the tallest of all Eastern United States broadleaf trees.
On the best sites, old-growth trees may be nearly 61 in (200 ft)
high and 2.4 to 3.7 in (8 to 12 ft) d.b.h., but more often they
are from 30.5 to 45.7 in (100 to 150 ft) at maturity, with a
straight trunk 0.6 to 1.5 m (2 to 5 ft) in diameter. Age at
natural death is usually about 200 to 250 years. However, some
trees may live up to 300 years.
Table 1-Height and d.b.h. of dominant
yellow-poplar trees in inthinned stands, by site index (1,3)¹
Age
Site
index
25 m or
82 ft
30 m or
98 ft
35 m or
125ft
Height
D.b.h.
Height
D.b.h.
Height
D.b.h.
yr
m
cm
m
cm
m
cm
20
13.4
17
15.8
21
18.6
25
30
18.9
25
22.6
30
26.5
36
40
22.6
30
27.1
37
31.4
43
50
25
34
29.9
41
35.1
48
60
26.8
37
32.3
44
37.5
52
70
28.3
39
33.8
46
39.6
55
80
29.3
40
35.1
49
41.1
57
90
30.2
41
36.3
50
42.1
59
100
30.8
42
36.9
51
43.3
60
yr
ft
in
ft
in
ft
in
20
44
6.7
52
8.2
61
9.8
30
62
9.9
74
12
87
14.2
40
74
12
89
14.5
103
17
50
82
13.4
98
16.2
115
19
60
88
14.4
106
17.4
123
20.4
70
93
15.2
ill
18.3
130
21.6
80
96
15.8
115
19.1
135
22.4
90
99
16.3
119
19.7
138
23.1
100
101
16.7
121
20.2
142
23.7
¹Based upon the
average height and d.b.h. of the 62 largest trees per
hectacre (25/acre).
Height and d.b.h. expected of the 25 largest trees per acre in
unthinned second-growth southern Appalachian stands are shown in
table 1. These data represent an average dominant tree grown
under fully stocked stand conditions. The largest trees would be
7.6 to 12.7 cm (3 to 5 in) larger than the average dominant at
comparable ages. Table 2 shows selected empirical yields for
natural stands (3,27). Mean annual increment in total cubic
volume ranges from 5.2 to 11.6 m³/ha (75 to 165 ft³
/acre), depending on site, at culmination around 70 years of age.
Table 2-Empirical yields for unthinned
yellow-poplar stands in the southern Appalachians¹
Volume by age class
in years²
Basal area
20
30
40
50
60
m²/ha
m²/ha
Site index 25 m
15
68
94
110
121
129
25
150
207
243
267
285
35
253
348
409
450
480
Site index 30 m
15
82
113
132
146
155
25
181
249
292
321
342
35
304
418
491
540
576
Site index 35 m
15
93
129
151
166
177
25
206
283
332
366
390
35
346
477
559
616
656
ft²/acre
ft²/acre
Site index 82 ft
65
974
1,341
1,574
1,732
1,847
109
2,147
2,956
3,469
3,818
4,070
152
3,614
4,976
5,839
6,427
6,851
Site index 98 ft
65
1,170
1,611
1,890
2,080
2,218
109
2,579
3,551
4,166
4,586
4,889
152
4,341
5,976
7,012
7,718
8,228
Site index 115 ft
65
1,333
1,836
2,154
2,371
2,528
109
2,939
4,047
4,749
5,227
5,572
152
4,947
6,812
7,992
8,797
9,378
¹All trees 13 cm (5in) and larger in d.b.h.
²Volume includes wood and bark of the intire bole.
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Reaction to Competition
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Although classed as intolerant of
shade, yellow-poplar can overcome much competition because it
produces numerous seedlings and sprouts, and grows very rapidly.
On land of site index 23 m (75 ft) and higher in the southern
Appalachians, yellow-poplar has faster height growth than any of
its associates except white pine up to 50 years of age (29). If
not overtopped, yellow-poplar takes and holds its place in the
dominant crown canopy of the developing stand.
It is often a pioneer on abandoned old fields or clearcut land and
may form essentially pure stands on very good sites. More often
it regenerates as a mixed type with other species, and it
commonly persists in old-growth stands as scattered individuals.
Yellow-poplar expresses dominance well and seldom, if ever,
stagnates because of excessive stand density. It prunes very well
in closed stands. Although it produces epicormic sprouts when the
bole is exposed, this trait is less pronounced than in many other
hardwood species. Because of these growth characteristics,
yellow-poplar stands can develop and produce considerable
quantities of large, high-quality products with no intermediate
stand management.
In the seedling-sapling stage, dominant and codominant trees are
little affected by thinning or cleaning (21,39). Intermediate or
overtopped trees of good vigor respond to release in both
diameter and height growth (46). Cultural treatment of
seedling-sapling stands is seldom needed or justified, however,
except to remove vines (12).
By the time stands reach pole size at 20 to 30 years of age, the
peak rates of growth and mortality are past and the crown canopy
is closed. Crown size on surviving trees is reduced and diameter
growth is considerably slowed. Thinnings that salvage or prevent
mortality, increase the growth of residual trees, shorten
rotations, and increase the yield of high-value timber products
are the essence of intermediate stand management. The net result
of numerous thinning experiments is that individual yellow-poplar
trees tend to use the space and accelerate diameter increment
(4,5,9,29). Response occurs across a wide range of sites and
stand ages, even in stands as old as 80 years that have never
been thinned previously. Total cubic-volume growth is greatest at
the highest densities and would be maximized by very light,
frequent thinnings that prevent or salvage mortality. On the
other hand, board-foot volume growth is maximum at densities well
below those that maximize cubic-foot volume growth. Board-foot
growth is near maximum over a wide range of density. Thus, there
is considerable leeway to manipulate stocking levels to achieve
diameter growth and quality goals without sacrificing volume
growth of the high-value products.
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Rooting Habit
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Yellow-poplar has a rapidly growing and
deeply penetrating juvenile taproot, as well as many strongly
developed and wide-spreading lateral roots. It is considered to
have a "flexible" rooting habit, even in the juvenile
stage.
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Seed Production and Dissemination
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The conelike aggregate
of many winged carpels ripens and matures from early August in
the North to late October in the South. In the Piedmont of North
Carolina, seedfall begins in mid-October and reaches its peak
early in November. High seedfall occurs during dry periods with
high temperatures, while periods of heavy rainfall result in low
seed dissemination rates. Viable seed is disseminated from
mid-October to mid-March; the percentage of viability, which
ranges from 5 to 20 percent, is about equal throughout the
period.
Yellow-poplar is a prolific seeder, and large crops are produced
almost annually (29,31). In North Carolina, a 25-cm (10-in) tree
produced 750 cones with 7,500 sound seeds, and a 51-cm (20-in)
tree produced 3,250 cones with 29,000 sound seeds. A seedfall of
741,000 to 1,482,000/ha (300,000 to 600,000/acre) is not
uncommon. Measurement of the 1966 seed crop in 19 southern
Appalachian stands showed an average of 3.7 million seeds per
hectare (1.5 million/acre). Seed size is highly variable, the
number per kilogram ranging from 11,000 to 40,000 (5,000 to
18,000/lb). In general, southern seeds are larger than northern
ones.
The individual, winged samaras may be scattered by the wind to
distances equal to four or five times the height of a tree. In
southern Indiana, a seedfall pattern was shown to be oval, with
the center north of the seed tree. Prevailing south and southwest
winds occasionally carried seeds more than 183 m (600 ft).
Distribution of filled seeds occurred in satisfactory
numbers-2,470 to 24,700/ha (1,000 to 10,000/acre)-as far as 60 rn
(200 ft) from a good seed tree in the direction of the prevailing
wind and 30 m (100 ft) in all other directions.
Yellow-poplar seeds retain their viability in the forest floor
from 4 to 7 years (11). Large quantities of seeds in the forest
floor are capable of producing seedlings when suitable
environmental conditions exist. In West Virginia, a study in
three 40-year-old stands with 101 to 470 yellow-poplar trees per
hectare (41 to 190/acre) showed from 240,000 to 475,000 sound
seeds per hectare (97,000 to 192,000/acre) in the forest floor
(17). These seeds produced between 138,000 to 190,000 seedlings
per hectare (56,000 to 77,000/acre) when transferred to an open
area and kept well watered.
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Seedling Development
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Yellow-poplar seeds must overwinter
under natural conditions, or be stratified under controlled
conditions, to overcome dormancy. Under controlled conditions,
stratification in moist sand within a temperature range of 0°
to 10° C (32° to 50° F) for periods of 70 to 90
days resulted in satisfactory germination. However, seedling
yield increases with increasing time of stratification.
Germination is epigeal.
Germinating yellow-poplar seedlings need a suitable seedbed and
adequate moisture to survive and become established. Seed
germination and seedling development is better on mineral soils
or well-decomposed organic matter than on a thick, undecomposed
litter layer.
Scarification and fires, which put seeds in contact with mineral
soil, increases the number of seedlings established significantly
(10,33). Under normal conditions, however, the site disturbance
caused by logging the mature stand is the only seedbed
preparation needed to provide enough yellow-poplar seedlings for
a new stand. In Indiana, I year after cutting, there were 9,900
yellow-poplar seedlings per hectare (4,000/acre) on a plot that
was clearcut, and 12,000/ha (4,800/acre) on partially cut plots.
In western North Carolina, more than 124,000 seedlings/ha
(50,000/acre) followed both clearcuts and partial cuts that
removed as little as one-third the basal area (26). On occasional
sites, deep accumulations of litter may require some seedbed
treatment, particularly on the drier sites dominated by oaks or
beech, and both disking and burning have proven effective. These
treatments have also been recommended for sites with few seeds in
the forest floor, especially if the site is covered with dense
herbaceous growth.
Yellow-poplar seedlings reach maximum or near-maximum
photosynthetic efficiency at relatively low light intensities, as
low as 3 to 10 percent of full sunlight (29,31). Growth was poor,
however, under an overstory canopy where the amount of sunlight
reaching the forest floor was limited to 1.33 percent; where
herbaceous cover existed, it was only 0. 13 percent. Sufficient
sunlight can be admitted by various cutting practices. Harvest
cuts ranging from removal of 30 percent of basal area to complete
clearcuts have resulted in establishment and growth of large
numbers of seedlings. Clearcutting, seed-tree cutting, and
shelterwood cutting have all been used successfully to regenerate
yellow-poplar (26,28,38,45). However, when partial cuts such as
shelterwood are used, height growth is severely limited by the
overstory. Seedlings in clearcuts may be two to three times
taller than seedlings under a shelterwood after the first 5 to 10
years.
The minimum size opening that can be used to regenerate
yellow-poplar is fairly small (10). Numbers of seedlings per
hectare vary little in openings of 0.12 to 12.36 ha (0.05 to 5
acres). Opening size, however, does affect growth significantly.
Both diameter and height are retarded in openings smaller than
1.24 to 2.47 ha (0.5 to 1 acre).
Season of logging, though not of critical importance, does have
some effect on establishment and growth of yellow-poplar
seedlings (40). In West Virginia, Ohio, and Indiana, summer
logging produced fewer seedlings than logging at other times of
the year. Apparently, in summer-logged stands most of the seeds
did not germinate until the following year, and these small
seedlings were not as well able to compete with the rank
vegetation that started the previous year. Nevertheless, cuttings
in summer months usually have produced sufficient seedlings where
a good seed source previously was present. If seed supply is
expected to be scarce, logging in fall, winter, or early spring
might be advisable.
After germination, several critical years follow. During this
period sufficient soil moisture must be available, good drainage
and protection against drying and frost heaving are necessary,
and there must be no severe competition from nearby sprout
growth. In a study in which various mulches were used to induce
soil temperature variation, seedlings grew faster in warm soil
than in cool soil. Soil temperatures as high as 36.1° C (97°
F) had a beneficial effect on seedling growth. Yellow-poplar
seedlings normally survive dormant-season flooding, but it was
found that 1-year-old seedlings were usually killed by 4 days or
more of flooding during the growing season (23). This
vulnerability during the growing season explains why
yellow-poplar does not grow on flood plains of rivers that flood
periodically for several days at a time. After the first growing
season, vegetative competition may become the most important
factor affecting survival and growth. Reducing competition by
cutting, burning, disking, or by using herbicides may be needed
to assure success.
On favorable sites the success of regeneration can usually be
determined by the size and vigor of the seedlings at the end of
the third year. Height growth during the first year ranges from a
few centimeters to more than 0.3 m (1 ft) on the best sites. With
full light, rapid height growth begins the second year, and at
the end of 5 years trees may be 3 to 5.5 in (10 to 18 ft) tall.
During its seedling and sapling stages, yellow-poplar is capable
of making extremely rapid growth. An 11-year-old natural seedling
15.2 m (50 ft) tall has been recorded.
The behavior and duration of height growth of yellow-poplar vary
by latitude. In a Pennsylvania study, seedlings had a 95-day
height-growth period beginning late in April and ending about
August 1. A sharp peak in height growth was reached about June 1.
In a northwestern Connecticut study, yellow-poplar had a 110-day
height-growth period beginning in late April and ending in
mid-August. Ninety percent of this growth took place in a 60-day
period from May 20 to July 20, and a sharp peak in height growth
was noted in the middle of June. In a study conducted in the
lower Piedmont of North Carolina, yellow-poplar had a 160-day
height-growth period beginning in early April and ending about
the middle of September. Growth was fairly constant, and there
was no peak in growth rate during the growing season.
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Soils and Topography
provided by Silvics of North America
Yellow-poplar thrives on many soil types with various physical
properties, chemical composition, and parent material. Within the
major portion of the range of yellow-poplar, these soils fall in
soil orders Inceptisols and Ultisols. Exceptionally good growth
has been observed on alluvial soils bordering streams, on loam
soils of mountain coves, on talus slopes below cliffs and bluffs,
and on well-watered, gravelly soils. In general, where
yellow-poplar grows naturally and well, the soils are moderately
moist, well drained, and loose textured; it rarely does well in
very wet or very dry situations.
Studies in locations as varied as the Coastal Plain of New Jersey,
the Central States, the Great Appalachian Valley, the Carolina
and Virginia Piedmonts, the Cumberland Plateau, and the mountains
of north Georgia have isolated soil features that measure
effective rooting depth and moisture-supplying capacity as the
most important determinants of growth (13, 18, 25, 30, 35). These
variables have been expressed in quantitative terms such as
relative content of sand, silt, and clay; depth of humus
accumulation; organic matter content of different horizons of the
soil profile; percent moisture retention; available water; and
depth to impermeable layers.
The same studies also stressed that topographic features plus
latitude and elevation, which partially determine the amount of
incoming solar radiation and rate of evaporation or otherwise
influence the moisture supplying capacity of soil, are important
variables in assessing site suitability for yellow-poplar growth.
The best growth usually occurs on north and east aspects, on
lower slopes, in sheltered coves, and on gentle, concave slopes.
Low levels of soil nutrients-most frequently nitrogen-have
occasionally been linked to slow rates of growth for
yellow-poplar. Also, naturally occurring levels of phosphorous
and potassium can limit growth. However, soil physical properties
far overshadow chemical properties in determining distribution
and growth of yellow-poplar.
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Special Uses
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Yellow-poplar is an extremely versatile wood with a multitude of
uses. Most important recent uses of the wood have been for lumber
for unexposed furniture parts and core stock, rotary-cut veneer
for use as crossbands in construction of furniture parts, in
plywood for backs and interior parts, and as pulpwood.
Considerable attention is being given to its use as structural
framing material and for veneers in structural plywood as a
substitute for increasingly scarce softwoods.
Yellow-poplar, with its shiny green leaves, distinctive flower,
and statuesque appearance, is an excellent ornamental for park
and garden where there is adequate space to accommodate its large
size. It has distinctive value as a honey tree (25). In one
season a tree less than 20 years old reportedly yields 3.6 kg (8
lb) of nectar equal to 1.8 kg (4 lb) of honey. It has nominal
value as a source of wildlife food in comparison to some other
species, but its seeds are eaten by quails, purple finches,
rabbits, gray squirrels, and white-footed mice. Because of its
greater volume per acre, which is due to its greater density and
height, yellow-poplar on very good sites may produce more
dry-weight yield per acre than species such as oak with much
denser wood. It may have potential as a producer of wood fiber
for energy and other uses.
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Vegetative Reproduction
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Yellow-poplar sprouts arise
chiefly from preexisting dormant buds situated near the base of
dead or dying stems, or near the soil line on stumps. Sprouts may
occur as high as 30 to 38 cm (12 to 15 in) on high stumps, but
more than 80 percent arise at or below the soil line (44). The
percentage of stumps sprouting and the number of sprouts per
stump decrease with increasing stump size. Stumps as large as 66
to 76 cm (26 to 30 in) sprouted 40 percent of the time, however,
with an average of eight sprouts per stump. Yellow-poplar of the
age and size harvested in second-growth stands sprouts
prolifically.
Trees of sprout origin are more subject to butt rot than those of
seedling origin (42). Nevertheless, a high percentage of stumps
that sprout produce at least one stem that is well anchored,
vigorous, and of desirable quality for crop-tree development
(20). In this respect, position on stump is important to
subsequent development. Sprouts arising from roots or from the
stump below groundline usually lack a heartwood connection with
the stump heartwood because the roots and below-ground portions
of the stump do not normally contain heartwood. Sapwood tissues
separating heartwood columns of stumps and sprouts may prevent
heart rot fungi, which enters the stump heartwood, from spreading
to the heartwood of the sprout.
The initial growth rate of yellow-poplar sprouts far exceeds that
of young seedlings. In western North Carolina, the dominant
sprout on each of 60 stumps on a good site grew an average of 1.4
m (4.7 ft) per year over the first 6 years (2). At age 24, these
sprouts averaged 24.4 in (80 ft) in height and 24 cm (9.6 in)
d.b.h. In West Virginia, the dominant stem of each sprout clump
grew at the rate of 0.9 in (2.9 ft) per year for 11 years on a
medium-quality site for yellow-poplar (44). The rapid, early
growth rate begins to drop off rnarkedly somewhere between 20 and
30 years. At this time, seedlings of similar age may catch up and
exceed sprouts in rate of height growth.
A number of investigators have attempted to root yellow-poplar
cuttings, but most early attempts were not successful. In a more
recent study, cuttings were rooted successfully after they were
dipped in dolebutyric acid and a mist of water was sprayed over
the propagation bed (6). It is not known, however, whether these
rooted cuttings would have successfully survived outplanting.
Yellow-poplar has been successfully rooted from stump sprouts of
7-year-old trees; soft-tissue cuttings placed in a mist bed began
rooting in 4 weeks and successfully survived transplanting. A
system of splitting seedlings longitudinally and then propagating
the halves was also highly successful. However, splitting
seedlings provides only one additional new plant from the ortet,
while rooting stump sprouts provides several.
A technique for propagating yellow-poplar by making use of its
epicormic branching ability has recently been described (24).
Partial girdling into the outer one or two annual rings results
in a profusion of epicormic sprouts that can then be rooted in
the same way as stump sprouts. This method has the advantage of
preserving the selected ortet for repeated use. Experience with
this method, however, reveals that not every girdled tree will
sprout well. Young trees and trees with low vigor are better
sprouters than old trees and rapidly growing trees.
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Distribution
provided by Silvics of North America
Yellow-poplar grows throughout the Eastern United States from
southern New England, west through southern Ontario and Michigan,
south to Louisiana, then east to north-central Florida (22). It
is most abundant and reaches its largest size in the valley of
the Ohio River and on the mountain slopes of North Carolina,
Tennessee, Kentucky, and West Virginia. The Appalachian Mountains
and adjacent Piedmont running south from Pennsylvania to Georgia
contained 75 percent of all yellow-poplar growing stock in 1974.
-The native range of yellow-poplar.
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Brief Summary
provided by Silvics of North America
Magnoliaceae -- Magnolia family
Donald E. Beck
Yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera), also called
tuliptree, tulip-poplar, white-poplar, and whitewood, is one of
the most attractive and tallest of eastern hardwoods. It is fast
growing and may reach 300 years of age on deep, rich,
well-drained soils of forest coves and lower mountain slopes. The
wood has high commercial value because of its versatility and as
a substitute for increasingly scarce softwoods in furniture and
framing construction. Yellow-poplar is also valued as a honey
tree, a source of wildlife food, and a shade tree for large
areas.
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Liriodendron tulipifera
provided by wikipedia EN
Liriodendron tulipifera—known as the tulip tree, American tulip tree, tulipwood, tuliptree, tulip poplar, whitewood, fiddletree, lynn-tree, hickory-poplar, and yellow-poplar—is the North American representative of the two-species genus Liriodendron (the other member is Liriodendron chinense), and the tallest eastern hardwood. It is native to eastern North America from Southern Ontario and possibly southern Quebec to Illinois eastward to southwestern Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and south to central Florida and Louisiana. It can grow to more than 50 m (160 ft) in virgin cove forests of the Appalachian Mountains, often with no limbs until it reaches 25–30 m (80–100 ft) in height, making it a very valuable timber tree. The tallest individual at the present time (2021) is one called the Fork Ridge Tulip Tree at a secret location in the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina. Repeated measurements by laser and tape-drop have shown it to be 191 feet 10 inches (58.47 m) in height.[4] This is the tallest known individual tree in eastern North America.
It is fast-growing, without the common problems of weak wood strength and short lifespan often seen in fast-growing species. April marks the start of the flowering period in the Southern United States (except as noted below); trees at the northern limit of cultivation begin to flower in June. The flowers are pale green or yellow (rarely white), with an orange band on the tepals; they yield large quantities of nectar. The tulip tree is the state tree of Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
Description
The tulip tree is one of the largest of the native trees of eastern North America, known in an extraordinary case to reach the height of 58.5 m (192 ft)[5] with the next-tallest known specimens in the 52–54 m (170–177 ft) range.[6] These heights are comparable to the very tallest known eastern white pines, another species often described as the tallest in eastern North America.
The trunk on large examples is typically 1.2–1.8 m (4–6 ft) in diameter, though it can grow much broader. Its ordinary height is 24–46 m (80–150 ft) and it tends to have a pyramidal crown.[7] It prefers deep, rich, and rather moist soil; it is common throughout the Southern United States. Growth is fairly rapid.[8]
Morphological changes of seedlings of tulip tree in the process of
ontogenesis.
The bark is brown, furrowed, aromatic and bitter. The branchlets are smooth, and lustrous, initially reddish, maturing to dark gray, and finally brown. The wood is light yellow to brown, and the sapwood creamy white; light, soft, brittle, close, straight-grained. Specific gravity: 0.4230; density: 422 g/dm3 (26.36 lb/cu ft).
Winter buds are dark red, covered with a bloom, obtuse; scales becoming conspicuous stipules for the unfolding leaf, and persistent until the leaf is fully grown. Flower-bud enclosed in a two-valved, caducous bract.
The alternate leaves are simple, pinnately veined, measuring 125–150 mm (5–6 in) long and wide. They have four lobes, and are heart-shaped or truncate or slightly wedge-shaped at base, entire, and the apex cut across at a shallow angle, making the upper part of the leaf look square; midrib and primary veins prominent. They come out of the bud recurved by the bending down of the petiole near the middle bringing the apex of the folded leaf to the base of the bud, light green, when full grown are bright green, smooth and shining above, paler green beneath, with downy veins. In autumn they turn a clear, bright yellow. Petiole long, slender, angled.
- Flowers: May. Perfect, solitary, terminal, greenish yellow, borne on stout peduncles, 40–50 mm (1+1⁄2–2 in) long, cup-shaped, erect, conspicuous. The bud is enclosed in a sheath of two triangular bracts which fall as the blossom opens.
- Calyx: Sepals three, imbricate in bud, reflexed or spreading, somewhat veined, early deciduous.
- Corolla: Cup-shaped, petals six, 50 mm (2 in) long, in two rows, imbricate, hypogynous, greenish yellow, marked toward the base with yellow. Somewhat fleshy in texture.
- Stamens: Indefinite, imbricate in many ranks on the base of the receptacle; filaments thread-like, short; anthers extrorse, long, two-celled, adnate; cells opening longitudinally.
- Pistils: Indefinite, imbricate on the long slender receptacle. Ovary one-celled; style acuminate, flattened; stigma short, one-sided, recurved; ovules two.
- Fruit: Narrow light brown cone, formed from many samaras which are dispersed by wind, leaving the axis persistent all winter. September, October.[9]
Harriet Louise Keeler provided a description of the tulip tree in Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. [a]
Gallery
Golden autumn leaves and seed cones
Large gray-green flower bud with yellow bract
Leaves of cultivar 'Aureomarginatum'
Columnar trunk in streambank woods
Early spring buds opening
Mineral stain in fresh-split wood
Taxonomy
Originally described by Carl Linnaeus, Liriodendron tulipifera is one of two species (see also L. chinense) in the genus Liriodendron in the magnolia family. The name Liriodendron is Greek for "lily tree".[10] It is also called the tuliptree Magnolia, or sometimes, by the lumber industry, as the tulip-poplar or yellow-poplar. However, it is not closely related to true lilies, tulips or poplars.
The tulip tree has impressed itself upon popular attention in many ways, and consequently has many common names. The tree's traditional name in the Miami-Illinois language is oonseentia. Native Americans so habitually made their dugout canoes of its trunk that the early settlers west of the Appalachian Mountains called it Canoewood. The color of its wood gives it the name Whitewood. In areas near the Mississippi River it is called a poplar largely because of the fluttering habits of its leaves, in which it resembles trees of that genus. It is sometimes called "fiddle tree," because its peculiar leaves, with their arched bases and in-cut sides, suggest the violin shape.[11]
The external resemblance of its flowers to tulips named it the Tulip-tree.[9] In their internal structure, however, they are quite different. Instead of the triple arrangements of stamens and pistil parts, they have indefinite numbers arranged in spirals.[12]
Distribution and habitat
In the Cretaceous age the genus was represented by several species, and was widely distributed over North America and Europe. Its remains are also found in Tertiary rocks.[9]
Today the tulip tree is one of the largest and most valuable hardwoods of eastern North America. It is native from Connecticut and southern New York, westward to southern Ontario and northern Ohio, and south to Louisiana and northern Florida.[13] It is found sparingly in New England; it is abundant on the southern shore of Lake Erie and westward to Illinois. It extends south to north Florida, and is rare west of the Mississippi River, but is found occasionally for ornamentals. Its finest development is in the Southern Appalachian mountains, where trees may exceed 50 m (170 ft) in height. It was introduced into Great Britain before 1688 in Bishop Compton's garden at Fulham Palace and is now a popular ornamental in streets, parks, and large gardens.[14] The Appalachian Mountains and adjacent Piedmont running south from Pennsylvania to Georgia contained 75 percent of all yellow-poplar growing stock in 1974.[15]
East Central Florida ecotype
Parts of east-central Florida near Orlando have an ecotype with similar-looking leaves to the coastal plain variant of the Carolinas; it flowers much earlier (usually in March, although flowering can begin in late January), with a smaller yellower bloom than other types. This east central Florida ecotype/Peninsular allozyme group seems to have the best ability to tolerate very wet conditions, where it may grow short pencil-like root structures (pneumatophores) similar to those produced by other swamp trees in warm climates. Superior resistance to drought, pests and wind is also noted. Some individuals retain their leaves all year unless a hard frost strikes. Places where it may be seen include Dr. Howard A. Kelly Park, Lake Eola Park, Spring Hammock Preserve, Big Tree Park and the University of Central Florida Arboretum.
Ecology
Liriodendron tulipifera is generally considered to be a shade-intolerant species that is most commonly associated with the first century of forest succession. In Appalachian forests, it is a dominant species during the 50–150 years of succession, but is absent or rare in stands of trees 500 years or older. One particular group of trees survived in the grounds of Orlagh College, Dublin for 200 years, before having to be cut down in 1990.[16] On mesic, fertile soils, it often forms pure or nearly pure stands. It can and does persist in older forests when there is sufficient disturbance to generate large enough gaps for regeneration.[17] Individual trees have been known to live for up to around 500 years.[18]
All young tulip trees and most mature specimens are intolerant of prolonged inundation; however, a coastal plain swamp ecotype in the southeastern United States is relatively flood-tolerant.[19] This ecotype is recognized by its blunt-lobed leaves, which may have a red tint. Liriodendron tulipifera produces a large amount of seed, which is dispersed by wind. The seeds typically travel a distance equal to 4–5 times the height of the tree, and remain viable for 4–7 years. The seeds are not one of the most important food sources for wildlife, but they are eaten by a number of birds and mammals.[20]
Vines, especially wild grapevines, are known to be extremely damaging to young trees of this species. Vines are damaging both due to blocking out sunlight, and increasing weight on limbs which can lead to bending of the trunk and/or breaking of limbs.[20]
Host plant
In terms of its role in the ecological community, L. tulipifera does not host a great diversity of insects, with only 28 species of moths associated with the tree.[21] Among specialists, L. tulipifera is the sole host plant for the caterpillars of C. angulifera, a giant silkmoth found in the eastern United States.[22] Several generalist species use L. tulipifera. It is a well-known host for the large, green eggs of the Papilio glaucus, the eastern tiger swallowtail butterfly, which are known to lay their eggs exclusively among plants in the magnolia and rose families of plants, primarily in mid-late June through early August, in some states.[23][24]
Use
Liriodendron tulipifera is cultivated, and grows readily from seeds. These should be sown in fine soft soil in a cool and shady area. If sown in autumn they come up the succeeding spring, but if sown in spring they often remain a year in the ground. John Loudon says that seeds from the highest branches of old trees are most likely to germinate. It is readily propagated from cuttings and easily transplanted.[9]
In landscape
The tulip tree is a popular specimen tree in landscape, turning a rusty orange in Fall
Tulip trees make magnificently shaped specimen trees, and are very large, growing to about 35 m (110 ft) in good soil. They grow best in deep well-drained loam which has thick dark topsoil. They show stronger response to fertilizer compounds (those with low salt index are preferred) than most other trees, but soil structure and organic matter content are more important. In the wild it is occasionally seen around serpentine outcrops.[25] The southeastern coastal plain and east central Florida ecotypes occur in wet but not stagnant soils which are high in organic matter. All tulip trees are unreliable in clay flats which are subject to ponding and flooding.
Like other members of the Magnoliaceae family, they have fleshy roots that are easily broken if handled roughly. Transplanting should be done in early spring, before leaf-out; this timing is especially important in the more northern areas. Fall planting is often successful in Florida. The east central Florida ecotype may be more easily moved than other strains because its roots grow over nine or ten months every year—several months longer than other ecotypes. Most tulip trees have low tolerance of drought, although Florida natives (especially the east central ecotype) fare better than southeastern coastal plain or northern inland specimens.
It is recommended as a shade tree.[9] The tree's tall and rapid growth is a function of its shade intolerance. Grown in the full sun, the species tends to grow shorter, slower, and rounder, making it adaptable to landscape planting. In forest settings, most investment is made in the trunk (i.e., the branches are weak and easily break off, a sign of axial dominance) and lower branches are lost early as new, higher branches closer to the sun continue the growth spurt upward. A tree just 15 years old may already reach 12 m (40 ft) in height with no branches within reach of humans standing on the ground.
Cultivars
- 'Ardis' – dwarf, with smaller leaves than wild form. Leaves shallow-lobed, some without lower lobes.
- 'Arnold' – narrow, columnar crown; may flower at early age.
- 'Aureomarginatum' – variegated form with pale-edged leaves; sold as 'Flashlight' or 'Majestic Beauty'.
- 'Fastigatum' – similar form to 'Arnold' but flowers at later age.
- 'Florida Strain' – blunt-lobed leaves, fast grower, flowers at early age.
- 'Integrifolium' – leaves without lower lobes.
- 'JFS-Oz' – compact oval form with straight leader, leaves dark and glossy; sold as 'Emerald City.'
- 'Leucanthum' – flowers white or nearly white.
- 'Little Volunteer' – almost as diminutive as 'Ardis' but with stronger form. Leaves more deeply lobed than 'Ardis.'
- 'Mediopictum' – variegated form with yellow spot near center of leaf.
- 'Roothaan' – blunt-lobed leaves.
- 'Snow Bird' - variegated, with white-edged leaves.
In the UK the species[26] and its variegated cultivar 'Aureomarginatum'[27] have both gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[28]
Liriodendron tulipifera has been introduced to many temperate parts of the world, at least as far north as Sykkylven, Norway and Arboretum Mustila, Finland.[29][30] A few nurseries in Finland offer this species even though it is not fully hardy there and tends to be held to shrub form.[31][32]
It is occasionally cultivated in tropical highlands, as in Costa Rica and Colombia. In the latter nation it is a street tree at Bogota.[33]
Honey
Nectar is produced in the orange part of the flowers. The species is a significant honey plant in the eastern United States, yielding a dark reddish, fairly strong honey unsuitable for table honey but claimed to be favorably regarded by some bakers[34] One 20-year-old tree produces enough nectar for 4 pounds of honey.[35]
Wood
Though not a poplar at all, the soft, fine-grained wood of tulip trees is known by that name (short for yellow poplar) in the U.S., but marketed abroad as "American tulipwood" or by other names. It is very widely used where a cheap, easy-to-work and stable wood is needed. The sapwood is usually a creamy off-white color. While the heartwood is usually a pale green, it can take on streaks of red, purple, or even black; depending on the extractives content (i.e. the soil conditions where the tree was grown, etc.). It is clearly the wood of choice for use in organs, due to its ability to take a fine, smooth, precisely cut finish and so to effectively seal against pipes and valves. It is also commonly used for siding clapboards. Its wood may be compared in texture, strength, and softness to white pine.
Used for interior finish of houses, for siding, for panels of carriages, for coffin boxes, pattern timber, and wooden ware. During scarcity of the better qualities of white pine, tulip wood has taken its place to some extent, particularly when very wide boards are required.
It also has a reputation for being resistant to termites, and in the Upland South (and perhaps elsewhere) house and barn sills were often made of tulip wood beams.
Arts
The tulip tree has been referenced in many poems and the namesakes of other poems, such as William Stafford's "Tulip Tree."[36] It is also a plot element in the Edgar Allan Poe short story "The Gold-Bug".[37]
Another form of art that the tulip tree is a major part of is wood carving. The tulip poplar can be very useful and has been one of the favorite types of trees for wood carving by sculptors such as Wilhelm Schimmel and Shields Landon Jones.[38][39]
See also
- The Queens Giant, a tulip tree that is the oldest living thing in the New York Metropolitan area (350–450 years old, 40 m or 130 ft tall)
-
Spathodea campanulata, often known as the African tulip tree, an unrelated plant in a separate family (Bignoniaceae)
Notes
-
^ "The leaves are of unusual shape and develop in a most peculiar and characteristic manner. The leaf-buds are composed of scales as is usual, and these scales grow with the growing shoot. In this respect the buds do not differ from those of many other trees, but what is peculiar is that each pair of scales develops so as to form an oval envelope which contains the young leaf and protects it against changing temperatures until it is strong enough to sustain them without injury. When it has reached that stage the bracts separate, the tiny leaf comes out carefully folded along the line of the midrib, opens as it matures, and until it becomes full grown the bracts do duty as stipules, becoming an inch [25 mm] or more in length before they fall. The leaf is unique in shape, its apex is cut off at the end in a way peculiarly its own, the petioles are long, angled, and so poised that the leaves flutter independently, and their glossy surfaces so catch and toss the light that the effect of the foliage as a whole is much brighter than it otherwise would be. The flowers are large, brilliant, and on detached trees numerous. Their color is greenish yellow with dashes of red and orange, and their resemblance to a tulip very marked. They do not droop from the spray but sit erect. The fruit is a cone 5 to 8 cm (2 to 3 in) long, made of a great number of thin narrow scales attached to a common axis. These scales are each a carpel surrounded by a thin membranous ring. Each cone contains sixty or seventy of these scales, of which only a few are productive. These fruit cones remain on the tree in varied states of dilapidation throughout the winter.[9]
References
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^ Rivers, M.C. (2014). "Liriodendron tulipifera". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2014: e.T194015A2294401. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2014-3.RLTS.T194015A2294401.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
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^ Tropicos
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^ "The Plant List". The Plant List. 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2014-04-07.
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^ Blozen, Will (April 29, 2011). "Fork Ridge Tulip Tree - New Eastern Height Record!!!". Archived from the original on May 6, 2023. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
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^ "Landmark Trees". May 6, 2011. Retrieved December 20, 2011.
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^ Tallest Native Trees of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park as Determined by the Eastern Native Tree Society (updated through 2004)
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^ Brockman, C. Frank (2002). Trees of North America. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 154. ISBN 1-58238-092-9.
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^ Justice, William S (Feb 15, 2002). "Tulip Poplar" (PDF).
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^ a b c d e f Keeler, Harriet L. (1900). Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 14–19.
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^ "Nature Ramblings". Science News-Letter. 59 (19): 300. 12 May 1951. doi:10.2307/3928783. JSTOR 3928783.
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^ "Nature Ramblings". Science News-Letter. 79 (24): 384. 17 June 1961. doi:10.2307/3942819. JSTOR 3942819.
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^ "Nature Ramblings". Science News-Letter. 67 (19): 302. 7 May 1955. doi:10.2307/3934969. JSTOR 3934969.
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^ "Tulip tree." McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. Credo Reference. Web. 26 September 2012.
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^ Wheeler, David (2001-10-20). "Branch lines: the tulip tree". Telegraph. Retrieved 2021-06-11.
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^ Donald E Beck (1990). "Liliodendron tulipifera". Silvics of North America. Vol. 2. Hardwoods. Russell M Burns & Barbara Honkala, tech. coords. US Forest Svc. pp. 406–416. LCCN 86-600518.
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^ 'Knocklyn Past and Present', p. 33
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^ Busing, Richard T. (1 January 1995). "Disturbance and the Population Dynamics of Liriodendron Tulipifera: Simulations with a Spatial Model of Forest Succession". Journal of Ecology. 83 (1): 45–53. doi:10.2307/2261149. JSTOR 2261149.
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^ "Eastern OLDLIST: A database of maximum tree ages for Eastern North America". Ldeo.columbia.edu. 1972-12-15. Retrieved 2014-04-07.
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^ Parks, Clifford R.; Wendel, Jonathan F.; Sewell, Mitchell M.; Qiu, Yin-Long (1 January 1994). "The Significance of Allozyme Variation and Introgression in the Liriodendron tulipifera Complex (Magnoliaceae)". American Journal of Botany. 81 (7): 878–889. doi:10.2307/2445769. JSTOR 2445769.
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^ a b Beck, Donald E. (1990). "Liriodendron tulipifera". In Burns, Russell M.; Honkala, Barbara H. (eds.). Hardwoods. Silvics of North America. Washington, D.C.: United States Forest Service (USFS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Vol. 2. Retrieved 2014-04-07 – via Southern Research Station.
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^ Robinson, Gaden S.; Ackery, Phillip R.; Kitching, Ian; Beccaloni, George W.; Hernández, Luis M. (2023). "HOSTS - a Database of the World's Lepidopteran Hostplants - Search Liriodendron tulipifera | National History Museum". nhm.ac.uk. doi:10.5519/havt50xw. Retrieved 2019-09-24.
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^ "Species Callosamia angulifera - Tulip-Tree Silkmoth | BugGuide". bugguide.org. Retrieved 2019-09-24.
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^ Holland, W. J. (1905). The Moth Book: A Popular Guide to a Knowledge of the Moths of North America. New York: Doubleday, Page and Company. pp. 85–86.
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^ "Tigers on the Wind: The Eastern Tiger Swallowtail". United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)--U.S. Forest Service. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
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^ http://www.coacommunity.net/downloads/serpentine08/serpentinegeoecology.pdf
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^ "RHS Plant Selector – Liriodendron tulipifera". Retrieved 22 May 2013.
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^ "RHS Plant Selector – Liriodendron tulipifera 'Aureomarginatum'". Retrieved 22 May 2013.
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^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 60. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
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^ "Tulipantre – Liriodendron tulipifera". Flickr – Photo Sharing!. 26 July 2009.
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^ "Liriodendron tulipifera - tulip tree". Mustila Arboretum. Retrieved 2021-06-11.
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^ "Lännentulppaanipuu (Liriodendron tulipifera)". Niittytila ~ Änggård (in Finnish). Retrieved 2021-06-11.
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^ "LÄNNENTULPPAANIPUU | Tahvoset". Archived from the original on 2017-02-14. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
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^ "Tulip Tree (Liriodendron tulipifera)". 28 April 2018.
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^ "Plants 4 Bees :: Magnoliaceae :: F267Liriodendron_tulipifera".
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^ Griffith, Randy Scott. "Liriodendron tulipifera". U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer).
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^ Stafford, William. Stories That Could Be True. New York: Harper & Row, 1977. Print.
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^ "The Gold-Bug" – Full text from the Dollar Newspaper, 1843 (with two illustrations by F. O. C. Darley)
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^ "SCHIMMEL, WILHELM (1817–1890)." The Encyclopedia of American Folk Art. London: Routledge, 2003. Credo Reference. Web. 26 September 2012.
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^ "JONES, SHIELDS LANDON (1901–1997)." The Encyclopedia of American Folk Art. London: Routledge, 2003. Credo Reference. Web. 26 September 2012.
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Liriodendron tulipifera: Brief Summary
provided by wikipedia EN
Liriodendron tulipifera—known as the tulip tree, American tulip tree, tulipwood, tuliptree, tulip poplar, whitewood, fiddletree, lynn-tree, hickory-poplar, and yellow-poplar—is the North American representative of the two-species genus Liriodendron (the other member is Liriodendron chinense), and the tallest eastern hardwood. It is native to eastern North America from Southern Ontario and possibly southern Quebec to Illinois eastward to southwestern Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and south to central Florida and Louisiana. It can grow to more than 50 m (160 ft) in virgin cove forests of the Appalachian Mountains, often with no limbs until it reaches 25–30 m (80–100 ft) in height, making it a very valuable timber tree. The tallest individual at the present time (2021) is one called the Fork Ridge Tulip Tree at a secret location in the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina. Repeated measurements by laser and tape-drop have shown it to be 191 feet 10 inches (58.47 m) in height. This is the tallest known individual tree in eastern North America.
It is fast-growing, without the common problems of weak wood strength and short lifespan often seen in fast-growing species. April marks the start of the flowering period in the Southern United States (except as noted below); trees at the northern limit of cultivation begin to flower in June. The flowers are pale green or yellow (rarely white), with an orange band on the tepals; they yield large quantities of nectar. The tulip tree is the state tree of Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
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