General Information |
Common Name | Western Hemlock |
Scientific Name | Tsuga heterophylla |
Sun Tolerance | Full Sun |
Height | up to 83 m (273 ft) |
Spread | 10 - 15 m (33 - 50 ft) |
Growth Rate | Fast |
Bloom Time | Spring |
Color | Green, |
Flower Color | Red |
Type | Tree |
Native | USA, Asia, Europe. |
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Classification |
Kingdom | Plantae – Plants |
Subkingdom | Tracheobionta – Vascular plants |
Superdivision | Spermatophyta – Seed plants |
Division | Coniferophyta – Conifers |
Class | Pinopsida |
Subclass |
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Order | Pinales |
Family | Pinaceae – Pine family |
Genus | Tsuga – Hemlock |
Species | T. heterophylla |
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Tsuga heterophylla – Western Hemlock |
Tsuga heterophylla commonly known as Western Hemlock is also
called by its botanical name of ‘tsuga’. It is a conifer of tranquility and
gracefulness, whose light lace-work of innumerable pendent branch-lets, and pendent
whip-like leader are making it increasingly well known in Europe. It was
introduced by John Jeffrey in 1853 from the Pacific coast of North America. It is
a large evergreen tree growing to 50–70 m (165–230 ft) tall, Sometime up to 83
m (273 ft), and with a trunk diameter of up to 2.7 m (9 ft). It is the largest species of hemlock,
with the next largest (Mountain hemlock, T. mertensiana) reaching a maximum of
59 m (194 ft).
The young shoots are tender, drooping at their ends, at
first pale yellowish-brown, darkening to reddish-brown. The small buds are
brown and ovoid. The irregular needles are 1 – 2 cm long, have almost a round
tip and are spread in two ranks in one plane; the upper rank has the shorter
needles. Their upper surface is dark green and grooved; their lower is lighter
and has two brands of grey stomata on either side of a slight midrib. The new
pale green needles which flush in June fringe the edges of all the branches,
giving the tree its best appearance. When billowed by the wind the light,
almost glaucous, underside of the foliage is exposed in mass. The foliage when
crushed has and odor with a supposed resemblance to that of the hemlock plant –
hence the name of the tree.
Both sexes of flowers are found on the same tree, but in
different parts. The small globular crimson, then yellow male flowers lie at
the bases of needles near the tips of shoots. The small females, at first green
and later pink or purple, are scaly, and lie at the ends of short, erect twigs.
These produce cones about 2 cm long that are egg-shaped and pendent. At first
they are green and tinged with crimson; later they have pale brown rounded
scales. Small winged seeds are released early in autumn. Empty cones persist on
the tree for many months.
The bark is at first russet-brown and smooth except for fine
scales. Later it becomes darker and deeply furrowed into scaly ridges. The
trunk thickens abruptly at the base, and is somewhat fluted. The wood is pale
yellow-brown with a somewhat darker heartwood, fairly strong and of a fine
texture. It is used for joinery, box-making, paper pulp and many general
purposes.
Forester’s value ‘tsuga’ as a fast producer of heavy volume
of timber and as an important underplant – indeed it prefers dappled shade and
is difficult to stablish on bare ground.
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