Ulmus 'Monstrosa'

Ulmus
Cultivar 'Monstrosa'
Origin France

The elm cultivar Ulmus 'Monstrosa' is believed to have originated in France, where it was listed without description as a form of Field Elm, Ulmus campestris var. monstrosa.[1] Krüssman included it in his manual as an Ulmus glabra cultivar,[2] but the plant's long, slender 2 cm petiole, if correctly reported, is not a feature of U. glabra, and is even less likely in a shrub form of this tree.

Description

'Monstrosa' is a compact shrub, with branchlets often fasciated, and leaves 58 cm long, partly pitcher-shaped at the base, and on slender stalks < 25 mm long.[1]

Cultivation

No authoritatively identified specimens are known to survive. A 'Monstrosa' at the Ryston Hall , Norfolk, arboretum, obtained from the Späth nursery in Berlin before 1914,[3] was killed by the earlier strain of Dutch elm disease prevalent in the 1930s. The shrub elm sold in the Netherlands as 'Monstrosa' appears from photographs to be the cultivar 'Nana'.[4]

Notable trees

An old elm, matching the description of 'Monstrosa' and possibly a rare surviving example of the cultivar, stands (2016) at the Salamander Place entrance to Leith Links, Edinburgh. Grafted at 2.5 m rather than at ground level, it is a dense, untidy bush with bunched burry branches and pitcher-shaped leaves of varying sizes, the largest on 2 cm stalks. Its conspicuously irregular form and branching may suggest the designation 'Monstrosa'.[5][6]

Synonymy

References

  1. 1 2 Green, Peter Shaw (1964). "Registration of cultivar names in Ulmus" (PDF). Arnoldia. Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University. 24 (6–8): 41–80. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  2. Johann Gerd Krüssmann, Handbuch der Laubgehölze 2: 536, 1962
  3. Ryston Hall Arboretum catalogue. c. 1920. pp. 13–14.
  4. Photographs of plant sold as 'Monstrosa' in Holland: Herman Geers Dwarf & Miniature Plants,
  5. Google Maps: Links Gardens - Google Maps, accessdate: August 11, 2016
  6. Possible U. 'Monstrosa', tree to left of right-hand path, bbc.co.uk
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