Neolitsea sericea

Discussion in 'Talk about UBC Botanical Garden' started by wcutler, Jul 11, 2012.

  1. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Accession: 018714-0348-1979
    Location: Asian Garden, Lower Asian Way
    Date: July 11, 2012
    Photos by Wendy Cutler

    New leaves on these trees are pale, drooping and very hairy top and bottom. Older leaves are dark green and tough, with unusual venation.

    This tree is near the Rhododendron barbatum grove on Lower Asian Way.
    20120711_UBCBG_NeolitseaSericea_Cutler_P1260564.jpg 20120711_UBCBG_NeolitseaSericea_Cutler_P1260551.jpg 20120711_UBCBG_NeolitseaSericea_Cutler_P1260572.jpg 20120711_UBCBG_NeolitseaSericea_Cutler_P1260560.jpg
    20120711_UBCBG_NeolitseaSericea_Cutler_P1260548.jpg
     
  2. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Here's a different accession, giving an idea of the tree shape.
    Accession: 024986-0522-1985
    Location: Asian Garden, Lower Asian Way, near Soulie Trail
    Date: July 11 and June 27
    Photos by Wendy Cutler
     

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    Last edited: Oct 8, 2020
  3. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Here's an update on the Neolitsea sericea. This is at the same location as posting #2, different accession.

    Accession: 024981-0522-1985
    Location: Asian Garden, Soulie Trail below Lower Asian Way
    Date: September 9, 2012

    The leaves are no longer fuzzy. And there are flower buds along some of the branches. Nadia thinks it might be too cold for them to develop here, but they seem developed enough to open. They have separate male and female trees, and we don't know yet which this is. No sense blaming lack of fruits on climate if they're male trees.

    I came across a Botany Boy article with good photos of this species.
     

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  4. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    Was being grown in the Horticulture Department greenhouse at Edmonds Community College during the 1970s.
     
  5. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    I'm not adding much to what has been posted before, except to say that the new leaves are coming out and if you're into soft and fuzzy, now is getting to be the time to see the new Neolitsea leaves. They're just starting, still very small.

    I posted some male flower photos in October 2012 and 2013. I'm not confident that I've checked every tree to see if there is any female.
     

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  6. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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  7. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    It's perfectly natural for women to focus on males.

    The fruiting may be due to the hot summer we had.
     
  8. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    I totally forgot that I already saw ripe fruits on the Neolitsea sericea in 2015, was so excited today to see some that are not even ripe yet. We only saw two new leaves - I don't know if we're early or late for those. There is one at the Bloedel Conservatory on which the new leaves have lost almost all their softness, but it's a very different climate inside there.
    Neolitsea-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20190506_133213.jpg Neolitsea-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20190506_133336.jpg
     
  9. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    I paid a visit to the Neolitsea sericea on Soulie Trail today (I corrected the spelling, as Ron B suggested below) . There are nice plump fruits, not ripe yet, and flowers, female ones first and of course on the branch with the fruits, and male in the last photo. That first photo isn't all that clear, but you can still see all the hairs on the flower corollas, particularly on the group on the right side of the photo.
    Neolitsia-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20201008_143933.jpg Neolitsia-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20201008_144026.jpg Neolitsia-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20201008_144035.jpg Neolitsia-sericea_UBCBG_Cutler_20201008_144207.jpg
     
    Last edited: Oct 8, 2020
  10. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    Presumably the trail is named after Andre Soulie (note spelling).
     
  11. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Thank you - I have fixed the spelling (in several places, was not a typo, was stored wrong in my brain). I guess if I'd realized that he was probably Jean André Soulié (André Soulié - Wikipedia, pronounced soo-lee-eh), I'd have spelled it correctly.
    I thought there was a paper or a page that had descriptions of all the guys (they're all guys?) whose names grace the trails, but I can't find anything, maybe am imagining it.
     
  12. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Over in the thread for the new kid on the block, Neolitsea aciculata | UBC Botanical Garden Forums, I noted that seem to have avoided posting leaf tips on N. sericea, so I'm dealing with that now. And using that as an excuse to post more photos. This is a much larger tree than the ones I usually visit on the Soulie trail, yet I almost never notice it. This week, though, the fuzzy new yellow leaves glistened in what wasn't even sun.
    In the first photo, the tip of the tree is at the centre top, and it fills in between all the lighter-coloured leaves.
    Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_134724.jpg Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135418.jpg

    Here are some leaf tips. Neolitsea in Flora of China @ efloras.org says "Leaf blade shortly acuminate at apex, acumen obtuse; fruit globose." I don't know what "acumen obtuse" means.
    Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_134750.jpg

    The petioles are long (Flora of China says "petiole 2-3 cm", in general, seems around twice the length of those on N. aciculata, though Flora of China says the difference can be even more) and are pretty much hairless on the older leaves. There aren't hairs along the ribs on the underside of the leaves.
    Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135059.jpg Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135116.jpg Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135128.jpg

    The new leaves feel as soft as they look. Above my nail in the second photo, I was trying to show the underside of the new leaf, which is pretty much the same as the top at this point.
    Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135026.jpg Neolitsea-sericea-UBCBG-3AB6_Cutler_20210526_135046.jpg
     

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