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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Fraxinus pennsylvanica | Green Ash
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Fraxinus pennsylvanica | Green Ash
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Green ash is a native, deciduous tree with a large, straight trunk and high branches. This dioecious tree grows up to 66 feet (20m) high with diameters of 1 1/2 to 2 feet (46-61cm), although in the wooded draws of the northern Great Plains it usually reaches about only 25 to 30 feet (8-10m) in height [26,44,53,57]. The largest living green ash is in Missouri, with a height of 106 feet (32m) and 4.4 feet (1.34m) in diameter [53]. A flood tolerant tree, green ash has an extensive, moderately shallow root system, which contributes to a high degree of windfirmness [53,57]. The bark is dark grey to brown with shallow furrows, and the wood is heavy, hard, strong and yellowish with wide, white sapwood [44]. Apical dominance is strong enough so that vigorous, uninjured, open-grown trees have a single, straight stem until they are 15 ft (5m) or more tall. In slow growing, shaded specimens, reassertion of apical dominance when the terminal bud is removed is slow. Therefore, understory seedlings frequently have poor stem form [57]. Leaves are opposite and oddly-pinnate about 8 to 12 in (20-30cm) long with 5 to 9 (usually 7) oblong-lanceolate or elliptic, serrate or entire leaflets [53]. The inconspicuous, unisexual flowers are borne over the entire outer part of the live crown, usually beginning when trees are 3-4 in (8-10cm) in diameter and 20 ft (6m) high [57]. Staminate flowers are dense panicles which are green with reddish anthers; pistillate flowers are greenish yellow in short panicles [44]. The fruit is an elongated, winged, single-seeded samara borne in clusters [11], and large seed crops are produced every year. According to Wright [57], green ash is composed of three or more ecotypes. The population from the arid northwestern part of green ash's range is more drought resistant than that from the moister central Great Plains, and as compared to the Coastal Plain ecotype (Virginia, North and South Carolina), the Northern States ecotype (Maine to Minnesota) grows more slowly, has greener petioles, is more winter hardy, and the leaves are less subject to damage by fall frosts. Several insects feed on green ash trees: oyster scale; carpenter worm; two ash saw flies; and unspecified borers particularly affect shade trees and windbreak plantings. Fungus, athracnose, rusts, and root rot sometimes damage trees and wood. Rabbits, deer and cattle may damage unfenced plantings [57]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Green ash regenerates both through sexual and vegetative reproduction often regenerating profusely from either seed or vegetatively after disturbance [38]. Large seed crops are produced each year, and the winged samaras are wind-dispersed, most within a few hundred feet of the parent tree. Some dispersal by water occurs, but the importance of water as a long distance dispersal agent is not known [57]. Wind and water dispersed seeds drop during the fall and winter months and germinate the following spring on a variety of ground types including moist litter as well as mineral soil, but rarely in dense vegetation [3]. This species grows best in partial shade [38]. Plants will reproduce from wind blown seeds along river banks [53]. This tree responds quickly to damage by sprouting when the top is removed, especially when trees are in smaller diameter classes [3]. The ability to sprout decreases with age and diameter of the parent tree [25]. The plants will sprout readily from the root crown or from stumps following damage [3,25,38,53,57], and it has been suggested that success and propagation of this species in an island environment is more due to its ability to sprout and resprout than to the number of successful instances of seedling establishment [3]. Land managers can take advantage of this reproductive strategy in northern Great Plains declining green ash communities by using selective cutting to help regenerate the woodlands through resprouting [25]. Green ash of sapling or pole size sprouts readily, resulting in clumps of several stems, and cuttings made from young trees root easily under greenhouse conditions. However no practical way to root cuttings from older trees has been found. This species can also be bench or field grafted [57]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Green ash, the most widely distributed of all the American ashes, grows in a subhumid to humid climate with an average annual precipitation of 15 to 60 inches (38-155cm) and an average length frost free season from 120 to 280 days. This flood tolerant species is almost completely confined to bottomland sites, but grows well when planted on moist upland soils. It is most commonly found on alluvial soils along rivers and brooks and less frequently in swamps, and is common on land subject to flooding once or twice a year, remaining healthy when flooded up to 40% of the time during the growing season [57]. Tree species most commonly associated with green ash are box elder (Acer negundo), red maple (Acer rubrum), American elm (Ulmus americana), pecan (Carya illenoensis), sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua), American sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides), plains cottonwood (P. sargentii), quaking aspen (P. tremuloides), black willow (Salix nigra), and willow oak (Quercus phellos) [57]. In the western part of its range, mainly in the northern Great Plains, where rainfall is insufficient to suppport upland tree growth, green ash is commonly found in upland coulees and draws, broad valleys, and on floodplains [9]. The tree canopy in these wooded draws is primarily green ash, associated with American elm, boxelder, and Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopulorum). Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana) dominates the sapling layer, and with snowberry (Symphoricarpos occidentalis), makes up the shrub component. Green ash occurs on a wide variety of soils although it survives best on deep, permeable, well-drained loams [52], preferring these to river sand [54]. This species has been planted on medium to coarse-textured upland sands and loams with good moisture relations, and is tolerant of moderately strong acid (pH 4.0) to moderately basic reacting soils [53]. The elevational ranges for green ash in several northern Great Plains states are as follows [18,32]: Colorado 3,500 to 5,700 feet (1,067-1,737m) Montana 3,400 to 4,500 feet (1,036-1,372m) Nebraska 2,600 to 4,500 feet (793-1,372m) North Dakota 2,240 to 3,840 feet (683-1,170m) South Dakota 3,000 to 4,200 feet (915-1,280m) Wyoming 4,100 to 4,400 feet (1,250-1,341m) SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Green ash is rated as intolerant to moderately tolerant of shade. In all but the northwestern extension of its range (northern Great Plains) it establishes early in succession on alluvial soils either as a pioneer or following eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides var. deltiodes), quaking aspen (P. tremuloides), or willow (Salix spp.). Green ash is less able to maintain a position in the crown canopy than its more rapidly growing associates such as red maple (Acer rubrum) and American elm (Ulmus americana); for this reason the proportion of ash usually decreases with increasing age in mixed elm-ash-maple stands [57]. However the northern Great Plains is beyond the range of red maple, and dutch elm disease has limited the expansion of American elm, therefore it apears that green ash is the climax species in these northern Great Plains green ash communities. Evidence also exists that it is replacing eastern cottonwood as the tree canopy dominant in floodplain communities where flooding no longer occurs [23]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Green ash, a dioecious tree, flowers before the leaf buds start to enlarge in March to April in Florida, and in late April to early May in Pennsylvania. Male flower buds require 1 to 2 weeks to pass from the unenlarged winter condition to completion of pollen shedding which takes about three days. Pollen is wind disseminated, most falling within 200 to 300 feet (60-90m) of the source. Female trees begin flower bud enlargement a few days later, and the stigmas are receptive as soon as they emerge from the bud for about a week. Within one month of pollination samaras developing from fertilized flowers reach mature size, although growth and ripening of the embryos is not completed until late September or early October. Seeds begin to fall as soon as they ripen until winter or early spring, and leaves fall at about the same time as when the seeds ripen [57].

Related categories for Species: Fraxinus pennsylvanica | Green Ash

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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