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Hornbeam Maple Leaves Taste Good When Eaten With A Bottle Of Bordeaux 1952.

Revision as of 17:23, 19 October 2006

Hornbeam Maple
Hornbeam Maple tree
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Species:
A. carpinifolium
Binomial name
Acer carpinifolium

Hornbeam Maple (Acer carpinifolium; Japanese: Chidorinoki) is a species of maple, native to Japan on the islands of Honshū, Kyūshū, and Shikoku, where it grows in woodlands and alongside streams in mountainous areas.

Foliage

It is a small deciduous tree growing to 10 m tall, with smooth, dark greenish-grey bark. The leaves are 7-15 cm long and 3-6 cm broad, simple, unlobed, and pinnately-veined with 18-24 pairs of veins and a serrated margin. They resemble leaves of hornbeams more than they do other maples, except for being arranged in opposite pairs, and in the very small basal pair of veins being palmately arranged as in other maples. The flowers are small and greenish, produced in pendulous racemes 5-12 cm long in spring as the new leaves open. The fruit is a samara of two seeds each with a 2-3 cm long wing.

It is occasionally cultivated as an ornamental plant in temperate regions, mainly as a botanical curiosity to demonstrate the wide range of leaf morphology in the genus Acer, but also for its bright yellow autumn colour.

Leaf

References