Description | Fern Leaf European Beech (Fagus sylvatica Asplenifolia) a cultivar with deeply cut, laciniate leaves. |
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Pronunciation | (FA-gus)(sil-VAT-i-ka) |
Plant Type | All Plants, Trees Deciduous |
Hardiness Zone | 4-9 |
Sunlight | full, tolerates some shade |
Moisture | average, avoid wet areas and compact soil |
Soil & Site | preferrs well drained, average |
Flowers | inconspicuous, monoecious, male and female flowers separate on the same tree |
Fruit | forms a triangular nut enclosed in a spiky 4-lobes involucre, contains 2 nuts |
Leaves | simple, green, deeply cut, golden yellow/bronze fall color |
Dimensions | can reach 60 by 50 feet or more |
Maintenance | could sucker |
Cultivar Origin | Introduced around 1804 by Conrad Loddiges and Sons Nursery, England. |
Misc Facts | "Fagus [genus name] is derived from Greek phegos (beech) or phago- (eating) component, and is the Latin name for 'beech tree'. Sylvatica means 'wild, of or from woods or forests". (#145) AKA: Cutleaf European Beech, Fernleaf Beech |
Notes & Reference | #01-Manual of Woody Landscape Plants (Michael Dirr, #93-North American Landscape Trees (Arthur Lee Jacobson), #145-Plant Lives (Sue Eland) www.plantlives.com |