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  2. Aerial root - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_root

    Banyan tree of undetermined species in Fort Myers, Florida European beech with aerial roots in a wet Scottish Glen. Hybrid elm cultivar with aerial roots, Edinburgh Indian banyan tree in Kodungallur Temple, Kerala, India. Aerial roots are roots growing above the ground. They are often adventitious, i.e. formed from nonroot tissue.

  3. List of elm trees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_elm_trees

    The tree would have been a little more than 2 feet (0.61 m) in diameter (at 30 inches (760 mm) above ground) in 1773. [51] In 1896, an alumnus of the University of Washington obtained a rooted cutting of the Cambridge tree and sent it to Professor Edmund Meany at the university.

  4. Ulmus laevis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_laevis

    Ulmus laevis Pall., variously known as the European white elm, [2] fluttering elm, spreading elm, stately elm and, in the United States, the Russian elm, is a large deciduous tree native to Europe, from France [3] northeast to southern Finland, east beyond the Urals into Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, and southeast to Bulgaria and the Crimea; there are also disjunct populations in the Caucasus and ...

  5. Ulmus americana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_americana

    The American elm is a deciduous tree which, under ideal conditions, can grow to heights of 21 to 35 meters (69 to 115 feet). [3] The trunk may have a diameter at breast height (dbh) of more than 1.2 m (4 ft), supporting a high, spreading umbrella-like canopy.

  6. Ulmus americana 'New Harmony' - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_americana_'New_Harmony'

    The bole divides into several erect branches about 10 m above the ground terminating in slender, pendulous branchlets. [ 2 ] Growth is rapid, young trees gaining in height by almost 1.7 m per annum in trials at U C Davis , although d.b.h. increase remained a modest 1.8 cm. [ 3 ]

  7. Ulmus glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_glabra

    The tree was by far the most common elm in the north and west of the British Isles and is now acknowledged as the only indisputably British native elm species. Owing to its former abundance in Scotland, the tree is occasionally known as the Scotch or Scots elm; Loch Lomond is said to be a corruption of the Gaelic Lac Leaman interpreted by some ...