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ACCESSIONPLANT NAMETAXONOMYORIGINGENEBANKIMAGEAVAILABILITYRECEIVEDSOURCE TYPESOURCE DATECOLLECTION SITECOORDINATESELEVATIONHABITATIMPROVEMENT LEVELNARRATIVE
0PI 590997'Valley Forge'Ulmus americana L. District of Columbia, United StatesNC7SEED1995DEVELOPEDCultivarIntroduced by the U.S. National Arboretum in 1995. Tetraploid selected by A. M. Townsend and L. R. Schreiber. Unusually high levels of tolerance to both aggressive and non-aggressive strains of the fungus causing Dutch elm disease. Superior horticultural characteristics. Upright, arching, broad vase-shaped branching structure with full, dense canopy of leaves. Propagules off original parent tree (suspected origin is Nebraska) are 7.9 meters tall with average crown spread of 9.1 meters after 12 growing seasons. Summer leaves average 119 mm long x 74 mm wide and are green but gradually turn yellow in autumn. Bark divided into grayish, flat-topped ridges, separated by roughly diamond-shaped fissures, and is typical of the species. In adaptability trials, performed well in Ohio, Maryland, and the District of Columbia. Adaptable from USDA Zone 5 to 7. Easy to propagate. Excellent for planting in urban and suburban sites, large yards, and recreational and industrial parks. Good street trees where there is wide tree lawn, and where high arching effect is desired.1493695PI 590997
1PI 590998'New Harmony'Ulmus americana L. District of Columbia, United StatesNC7Not Available1995DEVELOPEDCultivarIntroduced by the U.S. National Arboretum in 1995. Tetraploid selected by A. M. Townsend and L. R. Schreiber. Unusually high levels of disease tolerance to both aggressive and non-aggressive strains of the fungus causing Dutch elm disease. Superior horticultural characteristics. Broadly, vase-shaped crown, with main trunk dividing about 9 meters from the ground into several erect limbs which strongly arch above and which terminate in numerous slender, often drooping branchlets. Parent tree (origin near Springfield, Ohio) is 20.7 meters tall, with an average crown spread of 21.9 meters. Leaves average 107 mm long and 63 mm wide, and turn yellow in autumn. Bark is typical of species. Grows well in Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. Adaptable from USDA Zone 5 to 7, with possible cold hardiness into Zone 4. Easy to propagate. Excellent for planting in urban and suburban sites, large yards, and recreational and industrial parks. Good street trees where there is wide tree lawn, and where high arching effect is desired.1493745PI 590998
2PI 566597'Patriot'Ulmus hybr.District of Columbia, United StatesNC71993DEVELOPEDPRE 03/1993CultivarIntroduced by the U.S. National Arboretum and developed by A. M. Townsend. Crown moderately vase-shaped similar to that of an American elm. Leaves oblong-obovate, doubly serrate, average 103 mm long x 74 mm wide. Summer leaves green, gradually change to yellow in summer. At 13 years, 13.1 m tall with crown spread of 7.6 m. High resistance to Dutch elm. Moderate resistance to elm leaf beetle. Good cold and heat tolerance. Cold hardy to USDA Zone 4. Useful as street, highway, home, or park tree. Parentage: 'Urban Elm' x U. wilsoniana 'Prospector'.1461568PI 566597
3PI 536049'Frontier'Ulmus hybr.District of Columbia, United States Historic1989DONATED11/07/1989CultivarIntroduced by the U.S. National Arboretum. At 19 years, plant 8.2m tall with crown spread of 4.9m. Crown pyramidal. Leaves lanceolate, doubly serrate. Young leaves red (47A), mature to yellow green (147A). Autumn leaf color red purple (59A). Branch angle average 51 deg. Bark greyed green (197B) with large orange lenticels. Flowers absent. Reliably adaptable to USDA zone 5. Used as street, park, lanscape or highway tree. High resistance to Dutch elm (Ceratocystis ulmi). Moderate resistance to elm beetle (Xanthogaleruca luteola). Hybrid combination of U. carpinifolia x U. parvifolia.1430985PI 536049
4PI 536050'Prospector'Ulmus davidiana Planch. var. japonica (Sarg. ex Rehder) Nakai District of Columbia, United StatesNC71989DONATED11/07/1989CultivarIntroduced by the U.S. National Arboretum, originally selected by A.M. Townsend and L.R. Schrieber in 1975 from a 1965 planting of U. wilsoniana seedlings in Delaware, Ohio. High level of resistance in both laboratory and field trials to Dutch elm disease (Ceratocystis ulmi) and elm leaf beetle (Xanthogaleruca luteola). Plant 7.0 m tall with crown spread of 6.4 m at 9 years old. Crown vase-shaped, becoming pendulous at a lower height than American elm. Young leaves orange red (35A), maturing to yellow green (144A) to green (137B). Autumn leaf color yellow (13A). Branch angle average 53 deg. Reliably adaptable to USDA zones 4-7. Excellent street, lawn, highway, or park tree. Heat, drought, and cold tolerant.1430986PI 536050