Acer cissifolium

Geveerdbladige esdoorn

Acer cissifolium (vine-leafed maple, vineleaf maple, and variations thereof; Japanese: ミツデカエデ, romanized: mitsudekaede) is a maple native to Japan, from southern Hokkaidō south through Honshū and Shikoku to Kyūshū.[1]


is a deciduous small tree or large shrub growing to 5–10 m (rarely 15 m) in height, with smooth grey bark. The young shoots are green, often tinged pink, hairy at first with whitish hairs, becoming grey in the second year. The leaves are trifoliate, with a very slender red petiole up to 10 cm long; the three leaflets are 4–10 cm long and 2–4 cm broad, with 1–2 cm petiolules, and coarsely serrated margins. They are matte green above, paler and slightly shiny below, and turn pale yellow to pinkish in autumn. The flowers are produced in pendulous racemes 10–16 cm long, each flower with four sepals and petals; it is dioecious with male and female flowers on separate trees. The fruit is a paired samara, the nutlets are 7 mm long, the wings 15–25 mm long, spreading at an acute angle.[1][2][3][4]


Both the scientific and English names refer to the resemblance of its leaves to those of Cissus, a genus in the vine family.[3]

Bron: Wikipedia


Specificaties

Hoogte:

6 - 10 m

Kroon:

omgekeerd eirond, halfopen kroon

Schors en takken:

jonge twijgen grijs, roodbruin gevlekt

Blad:

samengesteld 3-tallig, ovaal, grijsgroen

Herfstkleur:

geel, oranje, rood

Bloemen:

compacte, hangende trossen, geelgroen, mei

Vruchten:

éénzadig, éénvleugelig, in paren bij elkaar

Oorsprong:

Japan

Bron: afbeelding en specificaties: Van den berk.

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