
Rocky Mountain Maple Acer glabrum
Species Paper by Lois Wythe
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Rocky
Mountain Maple
Aceraceae The only maple native to
North Idaho grows as a shrub or small tree. It is a sprawling kind of
shrub and needs a yearly pruning to keep it neat, if it develops as a
multi-trunk shrub, growing to four to six feet tall and as wide across. As
a tree, it can grow to as high as 33 feet. The Idaho champion in the
Sawtooth National Forest was 25 feet tall in 1973 and was 16.9 inches in
circumference. It has a 3.7 ft. crown. The National champion is also in
Idaho, in the closer Clearwater National Forest and had reached 47 feet
tall in that same year and had a 38 in. circum.
Stems:
Until the tree is quite old, the stems are a smooth, reddish-purple. Old
trees have grayish bark. Buds: Opposite, smooth, reddish, and plump, about 3 mm. long. Bud scales are paired. Leaves: Opposite, deciduous, 3 to 5 toothed, with the typical maple shape. The dark green leaves sometimes have a reddish tint. Their greatest glory is the fall display of red and yellow leaves, often with the red predominating. Flowers: Small, a yellow-green color in short terminal or auxiliary clusters. Flowers appear with the leaves in April to June. Fruit: Double winged fruits sometimes called "keys". When they fall, they do so in spirals, slowly, and are fun to watch. When dry, they are sold as potpourri ingredients in woodsy mixes. Medicinal
Uses: To the best of my knowledge, these
maples have no medicinal use although a few old sources mention that the
Indians made an eye tonic from the roots -- presumably of this native. Landscape
use: These are LARGE shrubby trees and they need space to spread
out. They are so spectacular
in the fall that they should be placed where they can be viewed from
picture windows; and even when their leaves fall, they remain highly
colored for a couple of weeks and are like a brilliant carpet around the
tree. If
you order: Be sure that the plant you buy is Acer glabrum
and not
the more common Acer rubrum, the red maple tree. Habitat:
Well drained and (in my experience) moist soil. I have two specimens-about
the same age and size--and the one growing in a grove of tamarack and
huckleberry has always had only yellow leaves. In that location, it does
not receive much water, and is shaded most of the time. On the other hand.
the shrubby tree on a south, well-drained slope, near a pond where it
probably does receive some sub- irrigation, does a spectacular number in
autumn, and so I have concluded that a mostly sunny location is probably
best. At the Arboretum we have
several Rocky Mt. Maples, but they are still quite small and so far have
not produced red leaves.
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