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| Practical ecological knowledge for the temperate reader. |
Acer Sp. - Maple
Local Species;
- Acer circinatum - Vine Maple [PCBC][E-flora][TSFTK]
- Acer glabrum - Douglas Maple [PCBC][E-flora] [TSFTK]
- Acer macrophyllum - Bigleaf Maple [PCBC][E-flora][TSFTK]
- Acer negundo - Box-Elder [TSFTK][E-flora]
- Acer platanoides - Norway Maple [E-flora]
- Acer pseudoplatanus - Sycamore Maple [E-flora]
"Habit: Shrub, tree; occasionally monoecious. Inflorescence: umbel, panicle, or pendent raceme."
"Species In Genus: +- 130 species: northern hemisphere. Etymology: (Latin name for Acer campestre) Note: Many species monoecious or dioecious."
"Unabridged Note: The sexuality of Acer species is complex, with some species described as dioecious or monoecious and many species described as having both unisexual and bisexual flowers on the same tree. However, maple flowers that appear morphologically bisexual may be functionally unisexual, producing functional pollen or ovules but not both. More study of sexuality is needed in our native maples. In some Acer species, fruit may become fully developed even if no seed is set, so that production of morphologically normal fruit is no proof that a plant is reproducing." [Jepson]
TAXONOMIC KEY TO OUR ACER SPECIES
1. Leaves pinnately compound; petals absent .......Acer negundo
1. Leaves simple, palmately lobed; petals usually present.
2. Flowers 10-50; inflorescence racemose or in panicles; trees up to 30 m tall.
3. Leaves grey, white or purplish below, the stalks without milky juice when cut; inflorescence in long, hanging panicles; fruits glabrous ..........Acer pseudoplatanus
3. Leaves green below, the stalks with milky juice when cut; inflorescence racemose or in stiff, more or less erect panicles; fruits glabrous or hairy.
4. Leaves lobed beyond the middle, the tips abruptly sharp-pointed; inflorescence racemose; fruits hairy .......Acer macrophyllum
4. Leaves not lobed beyond the middle, the tips bristlelike; inflorescence in stiff, more or less erect panicles; fruits glabrous ........Acer platanoides
2. Flowers usually less than 10; inflorescence umbellate or corymbose; plants usually shrublike and less than 10 m tall.
5. Leaves 3- to 5-lobed, glabrous to sparsely glandular short-hairy; sepals green........Acer glabrum
5. Leaves 7- to 9-lobed, soft-hairy beneath and often hairy above; sepals red .......Acer circinatum [E-flora]
Habitat/Range
- A. negungo; Mesic to dry sites in the lowland to montane zones; rare (sometimes garden escape) in S and NE BC; SE AB to W ON, disjunct along Great Lakes. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Acer platanoides; Mesic forest openings in the lowland or montane zones; rare horticultural escape in forests near urban areas in S BC; introduced from Europe. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Acer pseudoplatanus; Mesic forest openings in the lowland zone; rare horticultural escape in forests near UBC, and possibly elsewhere; introduced from Europe. [IFBC-E-flora]
Edible Uses
- Sap:
- A. negundo; The sap produces sugar but is less sweet than that of the Sugar Maple.[EWP] "It takes patience to carry out the boiling process, as several hours may be required and the shrinkage is alarming, often 30 to 1. However, the resulting syrup is well worth the trouble..." [Harrington]
- A. platanoides; "This European species is commonly planted as an ornamental. This is fortunate as it may be the best sugar producer of all the Maples." [Tozer UWP]
- A. pseudoplatanus; By tapping the tree you can secure sycamore sugar by boiling the juice.[Deschauer-1]
Other Uses
- Wood:
- A. negundo; "Some native American peoples used the wood of this tree for charcoal for ceremonial body decoration and tattooing".[DPL Watts]
- Shelterbelt:
- A. negundo; A fairly wind-tolerant tree, it can be used in mixed plantings as a part of shelterbelt plantings[200][PFAF]
- A. platanoides; "The trees are fairly wind tolerant and are often used in to give protection from the wind in mixed shelterbelts[200PFAF]. They are fast-growing and rapidly produce a screen[200]"[PFAF]
- A. pseudoplatanus; "The trees are fast-growing and make a good windbreak for exposed and maritime areas[11, 200PFAF]. They are often used in shelterbelt plantings[200PFAF]. This species usually self-sows freely and is often the first tree to invade disused farmland, cleared woodland etc. [K]" [PFAF]
Medicinal Uses
- Coughs:
A. platanoides; Sycamore and Horehound make a fine tea for coughs.[Deschauer-1]
- Leaves: A. pseudoplatanus; Leaves steeped in wine are an excellent compress for inflamed eyes. Green leaves mashed are used with good results in highly inflamed ulcers. [Deschauer-1]
Other Information
A. circinatum; A shade-tolerant to shade-intolerant, submontane to montane, Pacific North American deciduous shrub (rare on Vancouver Island). Occurs in maritime to submaritime cool mesothermal climates on fresh to very moist, nitrogen-rich soils; its occurrence decreases with increasing elevation and continentality. Plentiful and persistent in open-canopy forests and clearings on water-receiving (alluvial. seepage, and stream-edge) sites; dominant in primary successional stages on water-shedding sites with fragmental colluvial soils. Regenerates vigorously from stump sprouts; it hinders natural regeneration and growth of shade-intolerant conifers. Frequently grows with Polystichum munitum. Characteristic of Moder and Mull humus forms. [IPBC][E-flora]
Species Interactions
Mushroom Substrate: Acer Species, including A. macrophyllum, are "...suitable tree species for the cultivation of gourmet and medicinal mushrooms." [GGMM Stamets]
Acer circinatum - Vine Maple
"General: Deciduous small tree or shrub, 1-8 m tall, often propagating by layering, sometimes forming dense thickets; stems branching, pale green to reddish, becoming brown with age." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Habitat / Range Wet to mesic closed and open forests and streamsides in the lowland and montane zones; common in SW BC, rare on S Vancouver Island; S to N CA." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Ecological Indicator Information A shade-tolerant to shade-intolerant, submontane to montane, Pacific North American deciduous shrub (rare on Vancouver Island). Occurs in maritime to submaritime cool mesothermal climates on fresh to very moist, nitrogen-rich soils; its occurrence decreases with increasing elevation and continentality. Plentiful and persistent in open-canopy forests and clearings on water-receiving (alluvial. seepage, and stream-edge) sites; dominant in primary successional stages on water-shedding sites with fragmental colluvial soils. Regenerates vigorously from stump sprouts; it hinders natural regeneration and growth of shade-intolerant conifers. Frequently grows with Polystichum munitum. Characteristic of Moder and Mull humus forms." (Information applies to coastal locations only) [IPBC-E-flora]
Status: Native [E-flora]
Acer negundo - Box-Elder
"General: Deciduous, spreading tree up to 20 m tall; young branches glabrous to finely hairy, light brown, becoming furrowed with age." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Notes: This species is probably naturalized in BC." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Habitat / Range Mesic to dry sites in the lowland to montane zones; rare (sometimes garden escape) in S and NE BC; SE AB to W ON, disjunct along Great Lakes." [IFBC-E-flora]
Status: Exotic [E-flora]
Acer platanoides - Norway Maple
"General: Deciduous, spreading tree up to 30 m tall; bark more or less smooth, greyish." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Habitat / Range Mesic forest openings in the lowland or montane zones; rare horticultural escape in forests near urban areas in S BC; introduced from Europe." [IFBC-E-flora]
Status: Exotic [E-flora]
Synonyms
- Acer platanoides var. schwedleri G. Nicholson [E-flora]
Acer pseudoplatanus - Sycamore Maple
"General: Deciduous, spreading tree up to 30 m tall; bark scaly, various shades of brown." [IFBC-E-flora]
"Habitat / Range Mesic forest openings in the lowland zone; rare horticultural escape in forests near UBC, and possibly elsewhere; introduced from Europe." [IFBC-E-flora]
Status: Exotic [E-flora]
Acer glabrum - Douglas Maple
Young Shoots Fibre/Wood Bark
Family: Sapindaceae (Horse-chestnut family) (Previously in Aceraceae) [E-flora]
Subtaxa present in B.C.
Acer glabrum var. douglasii [IFBC-E-flora]
"Acer glabrum is a deciduous Tree growing to 9 m (29ft 6in) at a slow rate.
It is hardy to zone 5. It is in flower in April, and the seeds ripen in September. The flowers are dioecious (individual flowers are either male or female, but only one sex is to be found on any one plant so both male and female plants must be grown if seed is required) and are pollinated by Insects." [PFAF]
"Suitable for: light (sandy), medium (loamy) and heavy (clay) soils, prefers well-drained soil and can grow in heavy clay soil. Suitable pH: acid, neutral and basic (alkaline) soils. It can grow in semi-shade (light woodland) or no shade. It prefers moist soil." [PFAF]
"Douglas maple is the only member of the maple family (Aceraceae) native in Alaska. Named for its discoverer, David Douglas (1798-1834), Scotch botanical explorer, who introduced many trees from western North America to Europe." [Viereck ATS]
- Status: Native [IFBC-E-flora]
- General: Deciduous shrub or small tree, up to 10 m tall; stems branching, glabrous, young twigs reddish; bark greyish to reddish-purple. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves: Opposite, 2-12 cm wide, 3- to 5-lobed, glabrous to sparsely glandular short-hairy, coarsely toothed, paler on the lower surface, turning yellow to orange or crimson in fall. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers: Inflorescence of flat-topped, terminal or axillary clusters of about 10 flowers, male and female flowers on separate or same plants, appearing with the leaves; petals and sepals yellowish-green. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits: Winged, in pairs, 2-3 cm long, greenish-brown, pairs attached in a V-shape. [IFBC-E-flora]
- Habitat/Range: Mesic to dry forests and rocky slopes in the lowland and montane zones; common throughout BC, except Queen Charlotte Islands and adjacent coast and NE BC; N to SE AK, E to AB and S to OR and MT. [IFBC-E-flora]
USDA Flower Colour: Green Blooming Period: Late Spring
USDA Fruit/Seed characteristics: Colour: Brown Present from Summer to Fall [E-flora] USDA hardiness zone: 3-8 [PFAF]
Ecological Indicator Information: A shade-tolerant to shade-intolerant, montane to subalpine, Western North American deciduous shrub distributed more in the Cordilleran than the Pacific region. Occurs on nitrogen-rich, water-shedding and water-receiving sites within continental boreal, cool temperate, cool semiarid, and occasionally cool mesothermal climates. Scattered throughout coastal British Columbia; its occurrence increases with increasing continentality. Common on eastern Vancouver Island and in Skeena River valley. Grows with vine maple in the southem coast-interior ecotone. Like A. circinatum, it inhabits open-canopy forests, clearings, and primary succession stages on fragmental colluvial soils. Regenerates abundantly from stump sprouts; it hinders regeneration and growth of shadeintolerant conifers. Characteristic of Moder and Mull humus forms. [IPBC][E-flora]
Edible Uses
- Young Shoots:Cooked. They are used like asparagus[85][PFAF]. The seedlings, gathered in early spring, are eaten fresh or can be dried for later use[213][PFAF].
- Leaves: "The Blackfoot used the dry, crushed leaves of Rocky Mountain maple, western mountain maple, or Douglas maple (Acer glabrum) to spice stored meat (Hellson and Gadd, 1974)" [Turner, Kuhnlein]
- Seeds: Cooked. The wings are removed and the seeds boiled then eaten hot[213][PFAF].
- Inner Bark: [85][PFAF]. No more details are given but inner bark is often dried, ground into a powder and then used as a thickening in soups etc or mixed with cereals when making bread. An emergency food, it is usually only used when all else fails[PFAF].
- Cooking Aid: A. glabrum used to tie bunches of nodding onions together for pit cooking.[Turner, Kuhnlein]
Other Uses
- Fibre: Obtained from the inner bark is used for making mats, rope etc[99, 257]. [PFAF] The inner bark of maple (Laforet 1984) [(Acer glabrum Torr. var. douglasii (Hook.) Dippel)]
was used by the Gitksan for mat and basket making. [Gottesfeld1992] The inner bark of A. glabrum has been bound to a wooden handle as a soapberry whisk. [Turner&Burton]
- Wood: Tough, hard, heavy, close grained, pliable[82, 99]. It weighs 37lb per cubic foot[235] The wood can also be used as friction sticks[99]. The green wood can be moulded.[99]. The wood is too small for commercial exploitation, though it makes a good fuel[99, 229] It was often used by native North American Indian tribes for making small items such as snowshoes, drum hoops, bows and pegs[257][PFAF].
- Bark: Used to make spoons, paint containers etc[257][PFAF]
Medicinal Uses
- Wood & Bark: A decoction of the wood and bark is said to cure nausea[213][PFAF]. Another report says that this is specifically the nausea caused by smelling a corpse[257][PFAF].
- Bark: An infusion of the bark has been used as a cathartic[257][PFAF].
- "dec of bk mixed with Oplopanax drunk for diabetes" [Turner1990]
- "dec of bk drunk for any kind of poisoning (VW)" [Turner1990]
- Branches: A decoction of the branches, together with the branches of Amelanchier sp., was used to heal a woman's insides after childbirth and also to promote lactation[257][PFAF].
Cultivation
"Landscape Uses: Erosion control, Massing. Of easy cultivation, it succeeds in any soil, preferring a good moist well-drained soil[11]. Prefers a sunny position but tolerates some shade[11, 200]. Grows well in heavy clay soils. Chlorosis can sometimes develop as a result of iron deficiency when the plants are grown in alkaline soils, but in general maples are not fussy as to soil pH. Hardy to about -25oc[184]. This species grows well at Kew, a specimen was 12 metres tall in 1967[11]. The tree is almost fastigiate[11]. Most maples are bad companion plants, inhibiting the growth of nearby plants[18, 20]. Trees are usually dioecious. Male and female trees must be grown if seed is required[226]." [PFAF] "Due to its flexible stems, it can withstand heavy snow pack and often codominates avalanche chutes. Its range is from southern Alaska to New Mexico (Elias 1980, Uchytil 1989)." [PPNWNP]
"Rocky Mountain
maple seedlings grow about 30 cm/year (Hansen 2003). On good sites sprouts may reach 1.3 m within 2 years and 3 m in 10 years. Maximum heights are reached in 30 to 40 years (Anderson
2001).... It is an
important browse species for domestic livestock,
especially sheep, and wild ungulates. Samples of
summer growth contained about 8.7 percent crude
protein, 3.1 percent fat, 34.0 percent crude fiber,
51.0 percent N-free extract, and 3.2 percent ash.
Samples of winter browse contained 5.9 percent
crude protein, 2.4 percent fat, 33.3 percent crude
fiber, and 54.2 percent N-free extract (Anderson
2001). The seeds and vegetative parts are consumed by ruffed and blue grouse, grosbeaks,
and small mammals (Anderson 2001)." [Francis,2004]
Propagation
"Seed - best sown as soon as it is ripe in a cold frame, it usually germinates in the following spring. Pre-soak stored seed for 24 hours and then stratify for 2 - 4 months at 1 - 8°c. The seed has a hard coat and can be slow to germinate, often taking 2 years. The seed can be harvested 'green' (when it has fully developed but before it has dried and produced any germination inhibitors) and sown immediately. It should germinate in late winter. If the seed is harvested too soon it will produce very weak plants or no plants at all[80, 113]. When large enough to handle, prick the seedlings out into individual pots and grow them on until they are 20cm or more tall before planting them out in their permanent positions. Layering, which takes about 12 months, is successful with most species in this genus. Cuttings of young shoots in June or July. The cuttings should have 2 - 3 pairs of leaves, plus one pair of buds at the base. Remove a very thin slice of bark at the base of the cutting, rooting is improved if a rooting hormone is used. The rooted cuttings must show new growth during the summer before being potted up otherwise they are unlikely to survive the winter. It is very difficult to find suitable wood for cuttings." [PFAF] Seed: "Douglas maple begins to produce seed as early as ten years of age. Seeds reach
maturity from August through early October. Hand picking of the samaras is the best
method of collection. Clean by hand rubbing or hammermilling of the wings and
blowing off chaff. Dry the seeds to 10-15% moisture content and store at 2-5°C in
sealed containers. Warm stratification for 180 days followed by cold stratification for
180 days gives a 25% germination rate in container seeding in a greenhouse. Seed can
also be sown by direct field planting in the fall (Olson and Gabriel 1974)." [PPNWNP]Vegetative: "Douglas maple sprouts easily from root crowns following a disturbance (Olson and Gabriel 1974)." [PPNWNP]
References
- [E-flora] Acer glabrum,http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20glabrum&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed July 29, 2017
- Francis,2004 - Wildland Shrubs of the United States and Its Territories: Thamnic Descriptions: Volume 1, USDA Forest Service John K. Francis, Editor, July 2004
- Gottesfeld1992 - The Importance of Bark Products in the Aboriginal Economies of Northwestern British Columbia, Canada, Leslie M. Johnson Gottesfeld, Economic Botany 46(2) pp. 148-157, 1992
- [PFAF] Acer glabrum Plants For A Future, www.pfaf.org, U.K., Accessed May 12, 2014
- Turner1990 - Contemporary Use of Bark for Medicine by two Salishan Native Elders of Southeast Vancouver Island, Canada, Nancy J. Turner and Richard J. Hebda, Journal of Ethnopharmaology, 29 (1990) 59-72, Elsevier Scientific Publishers Ireland Ltd.
- Turner&Burton - Soapberry: Unique Northwestern Foaming Fruit, Nancy J. Turner and Carla M. Burton
- [Turner, Kuhnlein] Traditional Plant Foods of Canadian Indigenous Peoples, Harriet V. Kuhnlein & Nancy J. Turner, Gordon and Beach Publishers, Netherlands, 1991
Bigleaf Maple - Acer macrophyllum
- Family: Sapindaceae (Horse-chestnut) (Previously in Aceraceae) [E-flora]
Young Shoots, Seeds, Flowers, Inner Bark, Sap Fibre/Wood "Four-barks medicine"
"Acer macrophyllum is a deciduous Tree growing to 30 m (98ft) by 12 m (39ft) at a fast rate.
It is hardy to zone 6. It is in flower in April, and the seeds ripen in October. The flowers are monoecious (individual flowers are either male or female, but both sexes can be found on the same plant) and are pollinated by Insects." [PFAF]
Status: Native. [E-flora]
General: "Large, deciduous, spreading tree up to 30 m tall; branches greenish barked, smooth; older bark greyish-brown, ridged and often covered with lichens and mosses." [IFBC-E-flora] "Western maples are majestic trees that can grow to 65 feet (20 m) tall." [Jones TDFB]
Habitat / Range
"Moist to mesic forests and open slopes in the lowland and montane zones; common in SW BC west of the Coast-Cascade Mountains; S to CA, disjunct in ID." [IFBC-E-flora] "It is extremely flood tolerant and often remains in floodplain habitats.... Bigleaf maple's shade tolerance is low to moderate. It grows most rapidly in small forest openings and open areas". [PPNWNP]
Ecological Indicator Information
"A shade-intolerant, submontane to montane, Western North American deciduous broadleaved tree distributed more in the Pacific than the Cordilleran region. Occurs in maritime to submaritime cool mesothermal climates on fresh to very moist, nitrogen-rich soils (Moder and Mull humus forms). Its occurrence decreases with increasing elevation, latitude, and continentality. Common in pure or mixed-species stands (usually with red alder or black cottonwood) on alluvial, seepage, and stream-edge sites; occasional on water-shedding sites; dominant in primary succession on fragmental colluvial soils. This fast -growing tree regenerates abundantly from stump sprouts in clearings, thus hindering regeneration and growth of conifers. Its calcium-rich bark supports well developed corticolous moss communities. Characteristic of young-seral forests."[IPBC][E-flora]
Edible Uses
- Young Shoots: Peeled and eaten raw in spring. [Turner, Kuhnlein]. "Acer macrophyllum young shoots were eaten raw in spring by the Thompson Indians. The bark slips off easily at that time." [Lans et al., 2007]
- Seeds: "Sprouted and then boiled[226] The sprouted seeds are generally bitter, but the young shoots are quite sweet and juicy[257]". [PFAF] Sprouted seeds were boiled and eaten. winged "nuts" gathered and stored for winter [Turner, Kuhnlein] "Seeds eaten occasionally. (1)" [EMNMPV.8]
- Sap: Made into maple syrup. Used as a sweetener. Sugar substitute. [Turner, Kuhnlein]. "Maple sirup has been made from the sap of bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum) on numerous occasions (1, 2, 9), but we find no record of commercial sirup production." [Ruth et al.,1972] "...the use of broad-leaved maple (Acer macrophyllum sap by Nlaka' pamux during World War II as a sugar substitute". [TurnerDavis] "Although not produced commercially, maple syrup can be made from the sap." [PPNWNP]
- Yellow Flower Clusters: "Raw. They are sweet with nectar[183]" [PFAF][EMNMPV.8]
- Inner Bark: "Inner bark [177]. Eaten in small quantities with oil[257]. No more details are given but inner bark is often dried, ground into a powder and then used as a thickening in soups etc or mixed with cereals when making bread". [PFAF] Used fresh or occasionally dried. Used sparingly because it was said to cause constipation [Turner, Kuhnlein] "In the spring the Coast Salish scraped off the cambium of maple with a stick of oceanspray. It was eaten immediately, but in small quantities, as "it made one thin to eat too much" (Barnett, 1955). It was quite constipating, and was therefore eaten with oil. Also, the strips of cambium were laid criss-cross and dried in thick cakes for winter (British Columbia Department of Education, 1952)." [Turner&Bell]
Other Uses
- Preservation: "The leaves are packed around apples, rootcrops etc to help preserve them[18, 20]" [PFAF]
- Hair: "A sticky gum obtained from the buds in spring has been mixed with oil and used as a hair tonic[257]" [PFAF][Turner&Bell2] "The sticky gum from the spring buds was mixed with oil and used as a hair tonic (Cranmer, 1969). Cottonwood buds (Populus trichocarpa) were used for the same purpose." [Turner&Bell]
- Fibre: A fibre obtained from the inner bark is used for making scouring pads, rope and crude dresses[99, 118, 257][PFAF]. It was harvested in the spring and was also used in making baskets[257][PFAF] "Stripped inner bark used to make girls’ and women’s work skirts" [Ortiz, GRT] "The white inner bark was used to make a basket for kelpfish (Boas, 1909)." [Turner&Bell] "The Puget Sound Indians, and perhaps the Island Salish, made carrying straps for baskets from braided maple bark (Haeberlin and Gunther, 1930)." [Turner&Bell] "The white inner bark was used to make a basket for kelpfish (Boas, 1909)." [Turner&Bell2]
- Wood: "Light, soft, not strong, close grained. It is highly valued for timber, furniture and indoor use and is also used for carving bowls, veneer etc[46, 61, 82, 99, 118, 229]. It makes an excellent fuel, producing a hot smokeless flame[226]" [PFAF] "...(cabinet work, flooring, furniture, general carpentry, veneer... combs, hooks, paddles, utensils)" [Grandtner EDT] "... an important source of hardwood lumber. The wood is hard, but not very strong, and is used for furniture, paneling, cabinets, veneer, and musical instruments." [PPNWNP] "Maple wood is hard and fine-grained, and was used by the Kwakiutl to make rattles, hairpins, headdresses, fish net measures, and other articles (Boas, 1909; Hawthorn, 1967)." [Turner&Bell2]
- Properties: "Maple wood is hard, easily carved, and doesn't warp or crack. The Vancouver Island Salish used it for making dishes, spoons, combs, cattail mat creasers, spindles,paddles, cedar bark shredders, and ceremonial rattles (Barnett, 1955)." [Turner&Bell]
- Fuel: The wood also made an excellent fuel for hot smokeless fires. [Turner&Bell]
- Basketry: "Maple shoots from winter coppiced, pruned or burned plants heated, then split four ways; used as overlay in twined Maidu baskets and as sewing strands in Maidu and Sierra Mewuk coiled baskets". [Ortiz, GRT]
- Cooking Tool:
- Leaves: "wrapped round food during baking, impart a nice flavour to the food[99, 118]". [PFAF] "Leaves used for wrapping bulbs, corms, deer meat and other foods baked in pit ovens." [Ortiz, GRT] The Saanich and Cowichan sometimes placed maple leaves in steaming pits to flavour deer, seal, or porpoise meat (Harry, 1969). The large leaves were convenient for lining baskets, wrapping fish, or placing on berry-drying racks. Mitchell (1968") states that the Songish used bunches of the leaves to whip soap-berries in making 'Indian ice-cream.'" [Turner&Bell]
- Animal Bedding: "Big leaf maple leaves (Acer macrophyllum) are used as bedding to ensure that grass seeds do not get into the compost. These leaves are raked up and stored dry in autumn." [Lans et al., 2007]
Medicinal Uses
- Dermatological Aid [Heaton,2004]
- Tonic: "The raw sap has been used as a tonic[257]"[PFAF][Turner, Kuhnlein] Used as a tonic [Heaton,2004]
- Bark: "...an ingredient in “four-barks” medicine; imparted medicinal properties to Polypodium glycyrrhiza growing on it" [Turner1990]
- TB: "A Bark infusion has been used in the treatment of TB[257]"[PFAF] tuberculosis rememedy [Heaton,2004]
Uses
- Four Barks Medicine: Used for "anything wrong with stomach or digestive tract, such as ulcer or liver deterioration from excessive drinking", tuberculosis and kidney problems. [Turner1990]
- It includes the bark of "Acer macrophyllum, Quercus garryana, Alnus rubra and Taxus brevifolia". It is mixed with "Rhizomes of Polypodium glycyrrhiza D.C. Eat. (Licorice Fern; V 141739) (washed clean) and/ or leaves of Rubus ursinus Cham. & Schlect. (Trailing Wild Blackberry; V 1417471 (these are added to “sweeten” the medicine). Pour boiling water over the mixture and simmer on the stove until the solution becomes a brownish colour. Strain and pour into sterilized jars. Cool to room temperature. Drink about 250 ml (1 cup) per day until medicine is used up. If ailment persists, continue preparation and use as required." [Turner1990]
Maple Syrup
"In any event, the quality of the
sirup made from the bigleaf maple
trees in this study was lower than
sirup from the sugar maple, being
generally comparable to sirup made
from eastern soft maples, such as
red and silver maple. The sap from
the soft maples, like the bigleaf maple
sap, often is low in sugar content.
Some of the bigleaf samples did have
a trace of an unfamiliar “varnish”
taste, but this was not too objectionable. It occurred only in late-season
sap collections which may not warrant
collection anyway because of low sap
flow. With experience in collecting
and processing bigleaf maple sap,
procedures surely will be found to
make a good, marketable sirup,
even if its flavor may be different
from that of sugar maple." [Ruth et al.,1972]
"Past experience with bigleaf
maple in the Pacific Northwest has
shown an annual sap flow of 3 to 6
gallons per tree, with about 35
gallons of sap required to make 1
gallon of sirup." [Ruth et al.,1972]
"...trees producing well at the
beginning of the sap-flow season continued for that season and tended to
be good producers in subsequent
seasons." [Ruth et al.,1972]
"Standard practice in the East
is that sap must not remain in the
buckets or sap bags more than a few
hours before it is collected; otherwise
it will ferment and spoil (10)." [Ruth et al.,1972]
The sap was brought to boiling quickly; then the heat was reduced to maintain a gentle, steady boiling. Scorching of sirup was at a minimum. The foam formed during the early part of the boiling was skimmed continuously. The finishing point of the sirup was determined with a laboratory refractometer. [Ruth et al.,1972]
Sap started flowing right after
tapping on November 17, increased
between December 4 and 7, continued
to flow intermittently at a somewhat
lower level through January 21, then
tapered off rapidly in late January in
spite of apparently favorable sugar
weather.... New tapholes tapped
February 8 began to flow immediately
and the sap volumes measured for
the February 8-11 period were the
highest of the season. This was
followed by several heavy flows
through March 8."
The new trees tapped January 18
produced high sap flows January 18-21
and February l-11 (fig. 4). Flows
from all trees tapered off in mid-March
and only a trace of sap flowed after
March 22. Bud bursting was about
March 29."
"Total 1970-71 season sap flow per taphole for trees originally tapped November 17, 1970, ranged from zero to almost 17 gallons". [Ruth et al.,1972]
"Sweetness of bigleaf maple sap varied among individual tapholes from 1.0 to 2.6 degrees Brix.... Average sap sweetness
varied during the season with a peak of 1.4 degrees Brix reached about January 25". [Ruth et al.,1972]
"Although the bigleaf maple sirup was very tasteful, all the samples were low in typical sugar maple flavor. This low level of the usual predominant flavor allowed other flavors to be identified. One was a detectable but not too objectionable varnishlike taste in some of the late-season samples.... additional heat... did not improve the flavor. Rather, the Varnish taint” was increased in those late season samples that had it. The color of the
Oregon sirup was dark for a product concentrated in steam kettles, and this does not correlate with the low value for invert sugar." [Ruth et al.,1972]
Cultivation
"Of easy cultivation, it prefers a good moist well-drained soil[11] and a position that is at least moderately sunny[11, 200]. Grows well in heavy clay soils. Chlorosis can sometimes develop as a result of iron deficiency when the plants are grown in alkaline soils, but in general maples are not fussy as to soil pH. Growth of young plants is rapid in the wild, slowing down after 40 -50 years with a maximum life span of about 275 years[229]. This species thrives in Britain but it can be cut back in a severe winter if that follows a mild autumn[11]. A very ornamental plant[1]. Most maples are bad companion plants, inhibiting the growth of nearby plants[18, 20]." [PFAF] "...maturity reached at 150 years or more." [Ruth et al.,1972] Regenerates "... vegetatively from stump sprouts or root suckering as well as through seed." [Northcote FF] "It is also a good tree to plant along streambanks to prevent erosion". [PPNWNP]
Cultural Modification:
- "Applying fire to shrubs to induce long, straight sprouts for basketry material" "...two Maidu women... burned maple (Acer macrophyllum) for basketry: “They said that they went with their mothers to cut the maple shoots, and after they cut the shoots they spread dry leaves on the stumps. Then they set the leaves on fire...."" When the fire was out, they left. "I believe that this was done in the winter or early spring.”" [Anderson TTW]
Species Interactions
- Wildlife: "The seeds are eaten by squirrels, chipmunks, mice, and many birds, while the saplings, young twigs, and leaves are eaten by blacktail deer, mule deer, and elk. Several species of perching birds use bigleaf maples as nesting sites." [PPNWNP]
- Endophytic Mycobiota; 9 species were found in the leaves and twigs of A. macrophyllum from British Columbia. [BOF Elsevier]
- Mushroom Substrate: Acer Species, including A. macrophyllum, are "...suitable tree species for the cultivation of gourmet and medicinal mushrooms." [GGMM Stamets]
- Mollusks: "the presence of conifer, hardwood, and mixed overstory also influences the mollusk species on sites. for example, Cryptomastix devia, Monadenia fidelis fidelis, Megomphix hemphilli, and Prophysaon dubium all have a strong affinity for big-leaf maple (Acer macrophyllum). Monadenia fidelis fidelis can often be found hibernating under mosses growing on root crowns of this maple, or the young of that snail may be found well up the tree trunks under masses of long epiphytic mosses or lichens growing on the trunks. Cryptomastix devia are most often found under stands of bigleaf maples, often under sword ferns growing under the crowns of the trees or on the undersides of their logs. Megomphix hemphilli are also commonly found under these trees, frequently burrowed into the soft soil under logs on the forest floor; Prophysaon dubium use the leaf litter and logs." [Burke LSSPNW]
- Insect Host Plant:
- Erannis tiliaria (Linden Looper) - "ADULT Male, forewings brown, each with large pale white area in center; female, black, wingless. WINGSPAN 40 mm. LARVA Dark brown; broad, yellow lateral band with reddish brown patches. FOOD Larva: Bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum) and other maples (Acer spp.), California black oak (Quercus kelloggii) and other oaks (Quercus spp.). FOUND Throughout the U.S. The adult emerges in winter. The larva assumes a unique position when disturbed- its body is hunched and its head and first two pairs of true legs are elevated..." [Haggard IP]
- Amphipyra pyramidoides (Copper Underwing) - "ADULT Above, forewings mottled brown with light brown submarginal border. hindwings orange. WINGSPAN 50 mm. LARVA Green with yellow lateral line and prominent hump on posterior end. FOOD Larva: Bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum), deciduous oaks (Quercus spp.), and other broadleaf trees and shrubs. FOUND Throughout the region. Larva common on bigleaf maple and deciduous oaks. This species is not a true underwing (Cato- cala spp.)." [Haggard IP]
Propagation
"Seed - best sown as soon as it is ripe in a cold frame, it usually germinates in the following spring. Pre-soak stored seed for 24 hours and then stratify for 2 - 4 months at 1 - 8oc. It can be slow to germinate. The seed can be harvested 'green' (when it has fully developed but before it has dried and produced any germination inhibitors) and sown immediately. It should germinate in late winter. If the seed is harvested too soon it will produce very weak plants or no plants at all[80, 113]. When large enough to handle, prick the seedlings out into individual pots and grow them on until they are 20cm or more tall before planting them out in their permanent positions. Layering, which takes about 12 months, is successful with most species in this genus. Cuttings of young shoots in June or July. The cuttings should have 2 - 3 pairs of leaves, plus one pair of buds at the base. Remove a very thin slice of bark at the base of the cutting, rooting is improved if a rooting hormone is used. The rooted cuttings must show new growth during the summer before being potted up otherwise they are unlikely to survive the winter." [PFAF] Soak 48 hours and stratification for 45-130 days, incubation 20oC for 28 days. [Leadem FSSB]
"Seed tends to decay rapidly and cannot be stored for long periods of time. Zasada et al.... Place the seeds in airtight
containers soon after collection and store at 1oC until stratification begins. Cold
stratify at 1-5oC for 40-80 days prior to sowing. Buis (1996) suggests stratifying over
winter in a refrigerator and sowing in February or early March but has also noted
excellent germination by sowing directly in the fall. Sow in mulched beds and grow
for two years before transplanting or outplanting (Olson and Gabriel 1974, Uchytil
1989, Haeussler at al. 1990)." [PPNWNP]
"Bigleaf maple sprouts vigorously from the root crown after it is top killed
or cut (Uchytil 1989). Small seedlings, with about two or three leaves, can be salvaged
from construction sites or from under mature trees and transplanted into containers
(Buis 1996)." [PPNWNP]
References
- [E-Flora] - Acer macrophyllum - http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer macrophyllum&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed; May 12, 2014
- [Heaton,2004] - An Ethnobotanical and Medical Research Literature Update on the Plant Species Collected in the Lewis and Clark Expedition of 1803-1806, Darrall Heaton and Ara DerMarderosian, Bartonia, No. 62, Lewis and Clark Bicentennial: 1803-1806 — 2003-2006 (2004), pp. 63-93, Philadelphia Botanical Club
- [Lans et al., 2007] - Ethnoveterinary medicines used for ruminants in British Columbia, Canada, Cheryl Lans, Nancy Turner, Tonya Khan, Gerhard Brauer and Willi Boepple, Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2007, 3:11 doi:10.1186/1746-4269-3-11, 2007 Lans et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
- [Ortiz, GRT] - Contemporary California Indians, Oaks, and Sudden Oak Death (Phytophthora ramorum), Beverly R. Ortiz, GENERAL TECHNICAL REPORT PSW-GTR-217
- [PFAF] - Acer macrophyllum - Plants For A Future, http://www.pfaf.org, U.K., Accessed May 12, 2014
- [Ruth et al.,1972] - MAPLE SIRUP PRODUCTiON FROM BIGLEAF MAPLE, Robert H. Ruth, J. Clyde Underwood, Clark E. Smith, and Hoya Y. Yang, June 1972, Forest Service, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Portland OR.
- [Turner1990] - Contemporary Use of Bark for Medicine by Two Salishan Native Elders of Southeast Vancouver Island, Canada, Nancy J. Turner and Richard J. Hebda, Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 29 (1990) 59-72, Elsevier Scientific Publishers Ireland Ltd.
- [TurnerDavis] - "'When Everything Was Scarce': The role of Plants as Famine Foods in Northwestern North America, Nancy J. Turner and Alison Davis, J. EthnobioI. 13(2):171-201 Winter 1993
Other Acer Sp.
- Acer saccharum - Eastern Sugar Maple
- Nutritional Info: "The leaves of Acer saccharum contain less than 2% percent calcium, 0.24 percent magnesium, 0.75 percent potassium, 0.11 percent phosphorus, 0.67 percent nitrogen, and 11.85 percent ash (dry weight)." [Lans et al., 2007]
- Syrup Production: Experience with eastern sugar maple has shown that sap flow is correlated with cool nights when temperatures drop to 34o F. or lower, followed by warming conditions up to 40o to 50o F. the next day. The eastern sugar bush has a continental climate with prolonged periods of freezing weather, and sap flow is delayed until warming trends occur in the spring.... experience with sugar maple is that open-growth trees produce more and sweeter sap than trees growing under crowded conditions.... sugar maple sirup involves rapid boiling in large, shallow evaporators. This method brings out a better flavor than that attainable with small-scale laboratory procedures." [Ruth et al.,1972]
References
- [E-flora]
- Acer circinatum, http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20circinatum&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed: 04/02/2018 8:40:35 PM & July 22, 2021
- Acer glabrum, http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20glabrum&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed July 29, 2017
- Acer macrophyllum - http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%macrophyllum&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed; May 12, 2014
- Acer negundo, http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20negundo&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed: 04/02/2018 8:39:19 PM & July 22, 2021
- Acer platanoides , http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20platanoides&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed: 04/02/2018 8:42:51 PM & July 22, 2021
- Acer pseudoplatanus, http://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Acer%20pseudoplatanus&redblue=Both&lifeform=2, Accessed: 04/02/2018 8:43:55 PM & July 22, 2021
- [Jepson] Alan T. Whittemore 2012, Acer circinatum, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=11733, accessed on July 24, 2018.
- Lans et al., 2007 - Ethnoveterinary medicines used for ruminants in British Columbia, Canada, Cheryl Lans, Nancy Turner, Tonya Khan, Gerhard Brauer and Willi Boepple, Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 2007, 3:11 doi:10.1186/1746-4269-3-11, 2007 Lans et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
- [PFAF]
- Acer glabrum Plants For A Future, www.pfaf.org, U.K., Accessed May 12, 2014
- Acer macrophyllum - Plants For A Future, http://www.pfaf.org, U.K., Accessed May 12, 2014
- Acer negundo http://www.pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Acer+negundo, Accessed Jan 4, 2015
- Acer platanoides, http://www.pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Acer+platanoides, Accessed Jan 4, 2015
- Acer pseudoplatanus, http://www.pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Acer+pseudoplatanus, Accessed Jan 4, 2015
- Ruth et al.,1972 - MAPLE SIRUP PRODUCTiON FROM BIGLEAF MAPLE, Robert H. Ruth, J. Clyde Underwood, Clark E. Smith, and Hoya Y. Yang, June 1972, Forest Service, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Portland OR.
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