Ulmus minor subsp. sarniensis

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Ulmus minor subsp. sarniensis
Guernsey Elm, West Ride, Preston Park, Brighton.
Guernsey Elm, West Ride, Preston Park, Brighton.
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Rosales
Family: Ulmaceae
Genus: Ulmus
Species: Ulmus minor
Subspecies: U. m. subsp. sarniensis
Trinomial name
Ulmus minor subsp. sarniensis
(C.K.Schneid.) Stace
Synonyms
  • Ulmus campestris var. monumentalis Rinz.
  • Ulmus campestris var. nuda subvar. fastigiata oxfortii Hort. Wesmael
  • Ulmus Monument
  • Ulmus Sarniensis: Lodd. and Boom
  • Ulmus nitens (: minor) var. Wheatleyi Simon-Louis
  • Ulmus Wheatley

Ulmus minor subsp. sarniensis Stace [1], known variously as Guernsey Elm, Jersey Elm, Wheatley Elm, or Southampton Elm, once enjoyed much popularity in England, where it was widely cultivated for street planting. However the Dutch elm disease pandemic has now destroyed all the mature trees save a few at Preston Park in the centre of Brighton.

The appeal of the tree lay chiefly in its compact, columnar form, not dissimilar to the Lombardy Poplar. Rarely exceeding a height of 27 m, the tree has long stiff ascending branches forming a narrow pyramidal crown [2] [3]. It was granted the Award of Garden Merit (AGM) by the Royal Horticultural Society in 1969 just a few years before Dutch elm disease decimated it, and because of the disease susceptibility it is no longer planted. The small leaves and samarae are similar to those of the Field Elm group in general; like others of the group, the tree suckers very freely.

The origin of the tree remains obscure. The largest surviving specimen of Guernsey Elm is in Preston Park, Brighton. This tree is 34 m tall with a trunk 115 cm d.b.h. (diameter at breast height) in 2006, part of a line of trees averaging 30 m in height planted circa 1880. The Guernsey Elm was introduced to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight by Albert the Prince Consort, where it survives today as suckers along a lane leading to Barton Manor Farm. A golden-leaved form, Dicksonii, was raised in Chester in 1900 by the Dickson nursery, which marketed it as the Golden Cornish Elm.

The tree was planted in large numbers across Amsterdam, but was eventually replaced by the similarly fastigiate but much more disease-resistant clone, 'Columella' [2].

Contents

[edit] Cultivars

[edit] Hybrid cultivars

None known.

[edit] Arboreta etc. accessions

North America
  • Holden Arboretum, as U. × Sarniensis, acc. no. 56-185.
  • Morton Arboretum, as U. carpinifolia 'Sarniensis', acc. nos. 591-22, 212-40, 1043-41, all garden collected.
  • Smith College, as U. carpinifolia 'Sarniensis', acc. no. 8120PA.
Europe
Australasia

[edit] Nurseries

North America

None known.

Europe

[edit] Etymology

The tree is named for the Channel Island (Sarnia = Ancient Roman name for Guernsey), whence it may have originated. A similar tree is found along the Brittany coast, referred to in several 18th and 19th century French treatises as 'l'Orme male' [4] [5] owing to its phallic resemblance and it is still sometimes referred to as the Male Elm in Guernsey, although no mature trees survive there either. The synonym Wheatley Elm was derived from a tree planted at Wheatley Park, Doncaster, whither it was introduced and propagated by Sir William Cooke in the early 19th century [6]. The tree was also raised in great numbers at the Rogers nursery in Southampton in the late 1800s [7], which probably explains the synonym Southampton Elm. Although the tree is also known as the Jersey Elm, its introduction from Guernsey has been clearly chronicled.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stace, C. A. (1997). New Flora of the British Isles, 2nd edition. Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ McClintock, D. (1975). The Wild Flowers of Guernsey. Collins, London.
  3. ^ White, J. & More, D. (2002). Trees of Britain & Northern Europe. Cassell's, London.
  4. ^ Chailland, M. (1769). Dictionnaire raisonné des eaux et forets. Paris.
  5. ^ Deterville, P. (1821-3). Le nouveau cours complet d'agriculture theorique et pratique (16 vols). Reproduced by Librairie Nord Sud, Kervignac, France.
  6. ^ Howes, C.A. (2002). The Wheatley Elm: Is it part of Yorkshire's arboricultural heritage? Doncaster Museum & Art Gallery, unpublished paper.
  7. ^ Elwes, H. J. & Henry, A. (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. Vol. VII. pp 1848-1929. Private publication. [1]