Ulmus hybrid | |
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'Dodoens', Sir Harold Hillier Gardens, UK |
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Details | |
Hybrid parentage | ('Exoniensis' × U. wallichiana) selfed |
Cultivar | 'Dodoens' |
Origin | Wageningen, The Netherlands |
The Dutch hybrid cultivar Ulmus 'Dodoens' was derived from a selfed seedling of a hybrid of the Exeter Elm Ulmus glabra 'Exoniensis', and the Himalayan Elm Ulmus wallichiana [1]. The tree was one of several cultivars prepared for release in 1970, but delayed by the outbreak of the new, aggressive strain of Dutch elm disease [2].
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A very fast-growing tree with upright branches, the generally ovate leaves are dark-green, glabrescent, < 14 cm in length by 10 cm broad, with a pronounced acuminate apex. The UK Champion tree at the Westonbirt Arboretum planted in 1981 measured 17 m in height, with a trunk 36 cm d.b.h. 21 years later in 2002.[3]
'Dodoens' has moderately good resistance to Dutch elm disease, rated 4 out of 5 [4].
Eventually released in 1973, sales in the Netherlands dwindled from a peak of almost 16,000 in 1979 to 600 in 2004 [5][2]. Although still commercially available in Europe, the tree is no longer recommended for planting wherever the disease remains prevalent. 'Dodoens' was included in trials [3] in Canberra, Australia started in 1988, but has not thrived in that environment. It is not known to have been commercially released in North America although it was evaluated at the Iowa State University in the early 1970s where it perished, unable to tolerate the very cold winters. [6].
The cultivar is named for the 16th century Flemish physician and botanist Rembert Dodoens.
(Widely available)