Ulmus minor 'Microphylla Pendula'
Elm cultivar / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Field Elm cultivar Ulmus minor 'Microphylla Pendula', the Weeping small-leaved elm,[1] was first listed by the Travemünde nursery, Lübeck, and described by Kirchner[2] in Petzold[3] & Kirchner's Arboretum Muscaviense (1864), as Ulmus microphylla pendula Hort..[4][5] By the 1870s it was being marketed in nurseries in Europe and America as Ulmus campestris var. microphylla pendula.[1]
Ulmus minor 'Microphylla Pendula' | |
---|---|
Species | Ulmus minor |
Cultivar | 'Microphylla Pendula' |
Origin | Europe |
Not to be confused with Schneider's suberose cultivar 'Propendens'. Kew's U. campestris var. microphylla pendula (1896 Hand List) was equated with 'Propendens' by Henry (1913), who called it "a form of Ulmus nitens var. suberosa",[6] and by Rehder (1949),[7] and was classed by Melville as a nothomorph of 'Sarniensis'.[8][9]