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Old 22-10-2003, 08:42 AM
dstvns
 
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Default REPOST - Maples with large pointy yellowish leaves? FIREWOOD

I saw a posting regarding "saving" maples and thought this deserved a
re-post. Enjoy,

maple with LARGE, pointy all-yellow leaves? CHOP IT DOWN

Hello,

Since autumn and the inevitable falling of leaves is upon us, a great
opportunity presents itself in disposing of a major infestation of
non-native, exotic invasives. Usually I'm not so empassioned about
gardening or plant wildlife in general, but with this topic I make an
exception.

I am talking about the Norway maple, acer platanoides. Usually it is
extremely difficult to remove this import from Europe and Asia. In
fact, many nurseries still sell these trees, a practice which should
be outright banned in all states, punishable by severe fines. The
major problem with destroying any maple you find is that native
maples, especially sugar maples, could easy be mistaken for the
Norway.

The good news is there are several ways to tell the two apart. One is
the Norway's dense growth in extremely shady areas. Norways also
excrete a mily sap when a leaf stem is torn off the branch, whereas a
sugar maple's sap is clear.

However, the easiest way to tell the two apart is in the fall, when
the leaves change color. The native sugar maple will have at least
some tinge of red in their very small (2-4 inch wide) leaves. Usually
they are all-red, but may contain gold or brown. The non-native
norway maple leaves will be nearly all-yellow or brown, but the
highest ones may have tinges of red. And their VERY LARGE (6-12
inches wide) pointed leaves fall several weeks after nearly all other
trees are done with their colors. If you see an all-yellow maple tree
in the woods, when all the other trees are bare, it's almost certainly
a Norway maple and should be destroyed. If it cannot be immediately
destroyed then make a mark on the trunk (ie hatchet chop, lean a rock
on the side, etc.) so it can be dealt with later.

Why am I so emphatic about destroying this tree? Because it is an
"exotic invasive", meaning it is not only alien to our woodlands, but
it ultimately out-competes native trees and undergrowth, destroying
the bio-diversity of our woodlands and the ability of native wildlife
to exist in those areas. The Norway maple produces enormous clumps of
leaves, shading everything underneath them with an intolerable amout
of darkness, something native plants cannot compete against. Berry
bushes that would've supported native wildlife are stifled, since they
never evolved to compete with such competition. The Norway also grows
faster than nearly any other deciduous tree in North America; many
have been reported to grow 4 FEET per year. The Norway also keeps its
leaves longer than native plants; it is almost always the first tree
to sprout in spring, and the last to lose its leaves in the fall. To
add the ultimate insult to injury, the Norway maple excretes a toxic
substance into the soil around its roots, adding the finishing touch
in preventing any other plant, other Norways excluded, from surviving
underneath its dense canopy. It also seeds profusely; a single tree
can spread thousands of seeds and seedlings across the landscape every
year. Since the seedlings can tolerate dense shade, they grow
quickly under any tree canopy. The Norway's sugar content does not
even exist; it produces a milky sap that is un-suitable for sugar
production, thus making it a direct threat to the American maple
syrup industry.

The only sure way to remove a maple tree is to saw it off completely
at the base, drill out the heartwood and paint the trunk base with a
strong (10% glyphosate) solution of roundup. Without the herbicide
application, the plant will sprout dozens of new shoots. Within a
year these shoots could easily reach 3 feet tall or more. Even lone
trees, miles from any forest can pose a threat; a bird could
mistakenly digest the seed and carry it hundreds of miles on a
migratory route, so
removing as many as possible is helpful. Even without wildlife
assistance the seeds are designed to float on the wind like a tiny
sailboard; the seed could ultimately land several hundred feet from
its original mother tree. If a norway maple is being kept for shade
or fall color, there are many, MANY native alternatives to growing
this exotic, un-American tree. The tulip, or yellow poplar is a fast
grower, and can provide equivalent shade and color conditions as
the norway, but there are many other planting alternatives, including
a native sugar maple.

This tree is a major danger in the northeast US and Canada. It is
akin to brambles in the pacific nothwest, or kudzu in the deep south.
Without assistance these trees will continue to spread and slowly wipe
out wildlife and bio-diversity in our continent's forests.

Dan

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