Fraxinus pennsylvanica
Common Name(s):
Previously known as:
- Fraxinus americana var. pennsylvanica
- Fraxinus pennsylvanica var. lanceolata
- Phonetic Spelling
- FRAK-si-nus pen-sil-VAN-ih-kuh
- Description
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Green ash is a native, medium-sized, broadleaf, deciduous tree in the olive family (Oleaceae). Green ash is native to central and eastern Canada and the west central and eastern United States. Habitats include floodplains, mesic woodlands, riverbanks, swamps, and open fields. In North Carolina, this tree is often found in bottomlands and swamps, especially along brown water rivers and the low ground of Piedmont and lower mountains. The meaning of the specific epithet is “Pennsylvanian.”
Green ash prefers full sun to light shade, moist, well-drained soils of clay or loam and will tolerate occasional flooding. It is probably the most adaptable of all the ashes and is deer resistant. It is tolerant of drought, wind, moderate salt, and alkaline soil. It transplants well and grows well in a variety of locations and soils.
Green ash may grow 50 to 70 feet tall and 35 to 50 feet wide with a trunk 2 to 3.5 feet across. Young trees are pyramidal, but as the tree matures it becomes more rounded with an irregular crown. The bark is thick, gray-brown with shallow furrows and crisscrossing ridges which form diamond patterns. The leaves have 7 to 9 leaflets. Small, light green to purple flowers, with no petals, mature in loose panicles in early spring. The female tree produces a single-winged, dry, flattened samara with a slender, thin seed cavity that matures in the fall. These can be numerous and can make a mess when they fall to the ground, but the seeds provide food for many kinds of wildlife. Male trees are usually preferred in the home landscape because they do not produce fruit.
Across its wide distribution, this species is highly variable, and many of these variants have been given formal taxonomic status. Variation in leaf and twig hairiness, leaflet width and other morphological characteristics are included in a broadly defined green ash species.
Green ash made an excellent specimen or shade tree. It was appropriate for native, children’s and butterfly gardens. Planting new green ash trees is no longer recommended. The tree is very susceptible to infestation with the emerald ash borer. This borer will typically kill an ash tree within 3 to 5 years after infestation. It is very difficult to eradicate this pest which feeds under the bark and bores into wood. The emerald ash borer is native to Asia and was first discovered in the U.S. in 2002. It has now spread to several additional states in the northeast and upper Midwest and is expected to continue spreading. This borer now constitutes a serious threat to all species of ash in North America.
Quick ID Hints:
- grayish-brown bark with diamond-shaped ridges on older trees
- pinnately compound leaves with 5 to 9 leaflets that are ovate to lance-elliptic
- leaflet undersides are green and margins are crenate to serrate from the mid-leaf to the tip
- short-winged stalks on the leaflets
- leaf scar is semi-circular
- flowers appear after the leaves emerge
- female trees produce clusters of winged samaras
Insects, Diseases, and Other Pest Problems: Green ash trees are generally susceptible to several insect problems including the Emerald ash borer, lilac borer, carpenter worm, oyster shell scale, leaf miners, fall webworms, ash sawflies, ash leaf curl aphids. Potential disease problems include fungal leaf spots, powdery mildew, rust, anthracnose, cankers, and ash yellows. General ash decline is also a concern. Brittle branches are susceptible to damage from high winds and snow/ice. See potential insect and disease problem factsheets to the left.
VIDEO created by Ryan Contreras for “Landscape Plant Materials I: Deciduous Hardwoods and Conifers or Landscape Plant Materials II: Spring Flowering Trees and Shrubs” a plant identification course offered by the Department of Horticulture at Oregon State University
- Profile Video:
- See this plant in the following landscape:
- Cultivars / Varieties:
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- 'Cimmaron'
male tree, seedless, red to orange-red fall color - 'Johnson' or Leprechaun (trade name)
dwarf, often grafted to a standard trunk - 'Marshall's Seedless'
male, dark green foliage, 50 feet tall, 40 feet wide - 'Patmore'
male, seedless, zone 2 hardy, good disease and insect resistance and handsome, uniform habit. Fall color is yellow. - 'Summit'
male cultivar, vigorous, pyramidal tree that produces a strong central leader. - 'Urbanite'
seedless, dense, pyramidal, bronze fall color
- 'Cimmaron'
- 'Cimmaron', 'Johnson' or Leprechaun (trade name), 'Marshall's Seedless', 'Patmore', 'Summit', 'Urbanite'
- Tags:
- Cultivars / Varieties:
-
- 'Cimmaron'
male tree, seedless, red to orange-red fall color - 'Johnson' or Leprechaun (trade name)
dwarf, often grafted to a standard trunk - 'Marshall's Seedless'
male, dark green foliage, 50 feet tall, 40 feet wide - 'Patmore'
male, seedless, zone 2 hardy, good disease and insect resistance and handsome, uniform habit. Fall color is yellow. - 'Summit'
male cultivar, vigorous, pyramidal tree that produces a strong central leader. - 'Urbanite'
seedless, dense, pyramidal, bronze fall color
- 'Cimmaron'
- 'Cimmaron', 'Johnson' or Leprechaun (trade name), 'Marshall's Seedless', 'Patmore', 'Summit', 'Urbanite'
- Tags:
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-
Attributes:
- Genus:
- Fraxinus
- Species:
- pennsylvanica
- Family:
- Oleaceae
- Uses (Ethnobotany):
- Wood is heavy, hard, strong, and coarse-grained. The wood is used to make tool handles, oars, sports equipment, wood floors, and furniture.
- Life Cycle:
- Woody
- Recommended Propagation Strategy:
- Seed
- Country Or Region Of Origin:
- Central and Eastern Canada to West Central and Eastern US
- Distribution:
- Native: Canada--Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan; United States--AL, AR, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE, NH, NJ, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WV, WI, and WY. Introduced: Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Central European Russia, Czechoslovakia, East European Russia, Germany, Hungary, Korea, Poland, Romania, South European Russia, Ukraine, United States--NM, and Yugoslavia.
- Fire Risk Rating:
- low flammability
- Wildlife Value:
- The Green ash is a host plant for the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail butterfly and many moths. The bark is eaten by rabbits, porcupines, and beavers. Its foliage is browsed by white-tailed deer, seeds are eaten by birds, squirrels, and other small mammals.
- Play Value:
- Buffer
- Shade
- Wildlife Food Source
- Wind Break
- Particularly Resistant To (Insects/Diseases/Other Problems):
- Fire in the landscape. Resistant to heat, drought, and soil compaction.
- Edibility:
- Bark can be used in cooking as a thickener for soups or mixed with grain in making bread.
- Dimensions:
- Height: 50 ft. 0 in. - 70 ft. 0 in.
- Width: 35 ft. 0 in. - 50 ft. 0 in.
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Whole Plant Traits:
- Plant Type:
- Native Plant
- Perennial
- Tree
- Woody Plant Leaf Characteristics:
- Deciduous
- Habit/Form:
- Erect
- Irregular
- Oval
- Pyramidal
- Spreading
- Growth Rate:
- Rapid
- Maintenance:
- Medium
- Texture:
- Medium
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Cultural Conditions:
- Light:
- Full sun (6 or more hours of direct sunlight a day)
- Soil Texture:
- Clay
- Loam (Silt)
- Sand
- Soil pH:
- Acid (<6.0)
- Neutral (6.0-8.0)
- Soil Drainage:
- Good Drainage
- Moist
- Occasionally Dry
- Occasionally Wet
- Available Space To Plant:
- more than 60 feet
- NC Region:
- Coastal
- Mountains
- Piedmont
- USDA Plant Hardiness Zone:
- 3a, 3b, 4a, 4b, 5a, 5b, 6a, 6b, 7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b
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Fruit:
- Fruit Color:
- Brown/Copper
- Green
- Display/Harvest Time:
- Fall
- Fruit Type:
- Samara
- Fruit Length:
- 1-3 inches
- Fruit Width:
- < 1 inch
- Fruit Description:
- Fertilized female flowers give way to the fruit that is a single-winged, dry, flat samara. The wing extends less than half the body of the fruit, and there is a thin seed cavity. There are usually a large number of samara, and they appear narrow, 1 to 2 inches long, and 1/4 inch wide. Their color changes from green to tan as they mature. They hang in dangling clusters and are displayed on the tree from August to October. They can persist on the tree through the winter.
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Flowers:
- Flower Color:
- Green
- Purple/Lavender
- Flower Inflorescence:
- Panicle
- Flower Bloom Time:
- Spring
- Flower Shape:
- Tubular
- Flower Size:
- < 1 inch
- Flower Description:
- The tree is primarily dioecious, which means it has separate male and female trees. The male flowers are tight clusters of small, apetalous, light green to purple blooms, and the female flowers are greenish blooms that appear in loose panicles. They appear on separate trees from April through May after the foliage emerges.
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Leaves:
- Woody Plant Leaf Characteristics:
- Deciduous
- Leaf Color:
- Green
- Leaf Value To Gardener:
- Showy
- Deciduous Leaf Fall Color:
- Brown/Copper
- Gold/Yellow
- Leaf Type:
- Compound (Pinnately , Bipinnately, Palmately)
- Leaf Arrangement:
- Opposite
- Leaf Shape:
- Elliptical
- Lanceolate
- Ovate
- Leaf Margin:
- Crenate
- Entire
- Serrate
- Hairs Present:
- Yes
- Leaf Length:
- > 6 inches
- Leaf Width:
- > 6 inches
- Leaf Description:
- The leaves are 6 to 12 inches long, opposite, and pinnately compound with 5 to 9 entire leaflets. The leaflets are oval to lance-elliptic, 2.5 to 5 inches long, 1 to 1.75 inches wide, with a very short, less than 1/4 inch long winged stalk. The leaves are dark green and smooth on the upper surface, and the undersides are pale green with a silky pubescence. The margins may be crenate to serrate or entire. The pair of leaflets at the base of the leaf is smaller. The foliage turns yellow to bronze in fall, with the quality of the fall color often varying considerably from year to year.
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Bark:
- Bark Color:
- Dark Brown
- Dark Gray
- Surface/Attachment:
- Furrowed
- Ridges
- Scaly
- Bark Plate Shape:
- Diamond
- Bark Description:
- The bark is a 1/2 inch thick or thicker, gray-brown with shallow furrows and corky ridges which form a diamond pattern. The bark on older trees may be scaly.
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Stem:
- Stem Color:
- Brown/Copper
- Gray/Silver
- Green
- Stem Is Aromatic:
- No
- Stem Leaf Scar Shape:
- C-shaped, Cresent shaped
- Stem Lenticels:
- Conspicuous
- Stem Surface:
- Hairy (pubescent)
- Stem Description:
- The stem is stout, gray to greenish-brown, and may be smooth or pubescent with white lenticels. The leaf scars are semicircular to flat. The lateral buds sit on top of the leaf scar.
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Landscape:
- Landscape Location:
- Lawn
- Meadow
- Recreational Play Area
- Woodland
- Landscape Theme:
- Butterfly Garden
- Children's Garden
- Native Garden
- Pollinator Garden
- Design Feature:
- Shade Tree
- Street Tree
- Attracts:
- Butterflies
- Moths
- Pollinators
- Small Mammals
- Songbirds
- Resistance To Challenges:
- Deer
- Drought
- Fire
- Pollution
- Rabbits
- Salt
- Wet Soil
- Wind
- Problems:
- Frequent Disease Problems
- Frequent Insect Problems
- Messy
- Weak Wood