Home & Garden Trees & Houseplants

Box Elder Tree Identification

    Size and Geography

    • The sizes of box elder trees range from about 30 feet tall to 60 feet high. The trunks of the largest specimens attain diameters of about 30 inches, according to the "National Audubon Society Field Guide to Trees: Eastern Region." In the wild, box elder trees usually grow near swamps, streams or in floodplains, but it also develops in low-lying hardwood forests. Many escape cultivation, emerging in waste places and along the side of the road throughout the tree's range, which includes much of the East and the northern Great Plains.

    Foliage

    • One of the most obvious differences between the box elder and other maples is that the former has compound leaves. The leaf's central stem is about 6 inches long, with three to seven separate leaflets growing opposite each other on it, with one at the top of the stem all alone. The leaflets have from three to five teeth on their edges and they grow to between 2 and 4 inches in length. Most box elder trees feature leaves with just three leaflets on them. Their color is a light shade of green to a medium green tint, with the foliage changing to dull yellow in fall.

    Flowers and Bark

    • Another trait the box elder does not share with most maples is that its flowers develop in hanging clusters on separate female and male trees. The male box elder flowers, as well as the female blooms, are not significantly showy, with a greenish-yellow hue to them. The flowers bloom in March and April, appearing on the twigs before any leaves start to develop. The bark is a brown-gray color, with the newer growth having a shiny appearance, according to the University of Connecticut Plant Database. The bark on older trees has narrow ridges and furrows.

    Samaras

    • The seeds of maple trees, called samaras, often develop in back-to-back pairs looking like adjoining keys of a small set of wings. This is true of the box elder, but only the female tree has the samaras. The samaras start out yellowish in September and October, but become tan by winter. They stay on the tree long after the last of the foliage, giving the female trees some interest. However, landscapers sometimes select male box elders to avoid the potentially messy samaras and to keep the possibility of the tree developing new growth around it at a minimum.

Related posts "Home & Garden : Trees & Houseplants"

How to Germinate the Seeds of an Ornamental Orange Tree

Trees & Houseplants

Begonias Care & Storage

Trees & Houseplants

How to Grow Poinsettas

Trees & Houseplants

How to Plant an American Sycamore From Seeds

Trees & Houseplants

Shrubs for Container Planting

Trees & Houseplants

How to Preserve Rose Oil

Trees & Houseplants

The Best Flowers for Hanging Plants

Trees & Houseplants

Facts About Evergreen Trees

Trees & Houseplants

How to Ripen Butternut Squash After Picking

Trees & Houseplants

Leave a Comment