Cambridge University Press. Young leaves yellow, turning green later, crown narrow in youth. Selected by the Konrad Herz nursery, Germany before 2007 and still available commercially in central Europe. Narrow-crowned, at least in youth, with ascending branches. Iran, A form with blue-green twigs and leaves bluish underneath, represented by an old tree in the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (19699330*A; 21 m, dbh 73 cm in 2014 – Tree Register 2018) It has had at least a small distribution, having once been listed by Kris Michielsen in Belgium (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). The trunk is heavy and irregular, light grey and later grooved. The best documented surviving tree is at the former Cistercian monastery at Zlatá Koruna, Czech Republic (Almusaed 2018). Widely planted as an ornamental and street tree. Albania, The example in the 1890’s lime collection at Alexandra Park, Hastings, East Sussex (107 cm dbh in 2016 – Tree Register 2018) was only recognised as this cultivar (and as a grafted tree) after it was cut back and the vigorous sprouts from above the graft provided a contrast in colour to those from below it (O. Johnson, pers. Piggott: Tree bark: Bark of a 270 year old tree in an avenue, Uckfield, Sussex, England, UK. Latinski naziv: Tilia platyphyllos Scop. Schneid. Tilia platyphyllos 'Aurea' Quick Glance. Fruit 9–12 × 8–10 mm, obovoid, with 5 ribs, covered in dense white tomentum; wall thick and woody (Pigott 2012). Digital Image © Board of Trustees, RBG Kew http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, Kew Backbone Distributions Food. Overview: Large-leaved lime trees grow up to 35 m tall, with grey, finely fissured or ribbed bark. – largeleaf linden Subordinate Taxa. A few large old trees with a slight tendency to weep, such as the one in the Lower Garden at Knightshayes, Devon, 28 m, dbh 144 cm in 2017 (Tree Register 2018), may also represent this cultivar but are not obviously grafted. 30-35méteres maximális magasságot elérő, lombhullató fa, mely Közép és Dél-Európa, valamint a Kaukázus területéről származik. After one year, twigs are hairy and bright green, becoming bare in the winter. corinthiaca (Bosc ex K. Koch) Pigott, is endemic to the Peloponnese and somewhat more distinct, with essentially glabrous leaves and thin-walled, spindle shaped fruits. More Accounts and Images; ARS Germplasm Resources Information Network (TIPL) Integrated Taxonomic Information System (TIPL) Wildlife. It seems to have been associated with monasteries and convents in central Europe, and attracts legends linking the leaf with the monks’ cowls (Ješetová 2020). An extraordinary form in which at least some leaves have their sides joined at the base, to resemble a pitcher (Elwes & Henry 1913). obs.). © Copyright 2017 World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Le due specie si ibridano fra loro dando origine a Tilia x europaea (detto anche Tilia × vulgaris … Wetland Status. in Europe. © Copyright 2017 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. It is also frequently planted in parks and gardens. The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 2020. Czechoslovakia, (1967). C.D. TILIA PLATYPHYLLOS | INNOCENTI & MANGONI PIANTE. The wood is strong but prone to decay when damp, so has limited use as a building material. The species is hermaphrodite (has both male and female organs) and is pollinated by Bees. Selected for street planting by Hillier Nurseries in the early 1980s, and introduced in 1998 (Edwards & Marshall 2019). It … Scopoli’s specific epithet of 1771, from the Greek platys (broad) and phyllon (a leaf), reflects the usually larger leaves of T. platyphyllos, which are downy at least in familiar western European forms. While examples in cultivation are propagated by grafting or layering (Bean 1981), whether or not they represent a single clone is a moot point. Főképpen Közép- és Dél-Európában elterjedt faj. Hairiness increases gradually as one moves north, east and west (Pigott 2012). While admitting that they are points in a continuum, Pigott (2012) adopts three of these. Tilia platyphyllos. (1968). It was spotted and propagated by Donovan Caldwell Leaman at Caldwell and Sons Nurseries, Cheshire some time before the nurseries closed in 1992 (Leaman 2019); one of the two original plants, donated to the Thorp Perrow Arboretum in North Yorkshire, was 8 m, dbh 13 cm in 2019 (Tree Register 2019). Many of the ancient village limes of central Europe belong to Tilia platyphyllos. Lime flower tea is also used widely to ease coughs. Yugoslavia, Great Britain, (2012): Seznam cévnatých rostlin květeny České republiky , Preslia 84: 647–811 [as Tilia platyphyllos Scop. A Swedish selection, found in a park in Örebro by G. Karlsson and distributed by the Lundström nursery from 1935 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). Broad-leaved Lime varies considerably across its range, especially in hairiness. August 2020. Herbal substance(s) (binomial scientific name of the plant, including plant part) vulgaris. A site produced by the International Dendrology Society. The heavy lateral branches are usually found low on the trunk. A variant in Irish Gardens was described by Alan Mitchell (Mitchell 1974) as both cut-leaved and variegated; one was recorded by Mitchell at the Westonbirt National Arboretum as 15 m, dbh 32 cm in 1967 (Tree Register 2018). Origine: Europa, Caucaso, Asia Minore. Image Owen Johnson. As with other limes, variegated cultivars tend not to persist in cultivation; this is certainly the case in ‘Albo-Marginata’ (white margins, pre-1903), but some extant cut-leaved clones are variegated (discussed under ‘Laciniata’). ex W.D.J.Koch Tilia hostii Opiz, 1852 Tilia platyphyllos f. aurea (Loudon) Rehder Homonyms Tilia platyphyllos Scop. SynonymsTilia vitifolia HostTilia platyphyllos var. Yellow twigs from above the graft, on the squirrel's side of the tree, contrast with red ones from below it, on the champion Golden-twigged Lime in Alexandra Park, Hastings, East Sussex. A nagylevelű hárs (Tilia platyphyllos) a mályvafélék (Malvaceae) családjába tartozó hárs nemzetség egyik, a Kárpát-medencében is honos faja.. Elterjedése, élőhelye. Large-leaved Linden is well represented in arboreta within our North American area. The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Selected Plant Families 2020. World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (2012). Lacking stellate hairs on the undersides of the leaves, T. platyphyllos is placed in Section Anastraea. A form with drooping branches, perhaps old but of uncertain origin (Santamour & McArdle 1985). Seeds are dried, packaged and stored at a sub-zero temperature in our seed bank vault. A nagylevelű hárs (Tilia platyphyllos) bemutatása, gondozása A nagylevelű hárs (Tilia platyphyllos) kb. Similar Images . Tilia E. Eaton, G. Caudullo, D. de Rigo Tilia cordata Mill., known as small-leaved lime, and Tilia platyphyllos Scop., known as large-leaved lime, are very similar trees, both native to Europe and preferring warmer climates. Kew has one of the main collections of lime trees ( Tilia sp.) Two hollow pollards grow in parkland on limestone at Downton Castle, Herefordshire; the larger was measured at 2.86 m dbh in 2012. An ancient stool of Tilia platyphyllos near Colesbourne in the Gloucestershire Cotswolds. It is a more upland species than T. cordata, associated with calcareous soils, but despite their habitat and morphological differences Linnaeus failed to distinguish between the two western European species and their hybrid (Pigott 2012). (ed.) Lime flowers are a rich source of nectar and attract bees, wasps, flies and moths. Origin unknown, before 2009; marketed as a street tree in central and eastern Europe (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013; Lappen Tree Nurseries 2020). Status: scarce Typically this species occurs as a large tree or coppice stool in old woodland, where it is usually associated with a mixed canopy of Acer campestre, A. pseudoplatanus, Fagus sylvatica, Fraxinus excelsior, Quercus robur, Taxus baccata and Ulmus glabra, with the field layer dominated by Mercurialis perennis (Rodwell 1991a). It reduces Nasal Congestion, Throat Irritation and Cough. Tilia platyphyllos is a deciduous Tree growing to 30 m (98ft) by 20 m (65ft) at a medium rate. Recommended citationJohnson, O. Description Overview: Large-leaved lime trees grow up to 35 m tall, with grey, finely fissured or ribbed bark. A specimen planted at the Arnold Arboretum, Massachusetts in 1965 was 35.5 cm dbh by 2019 (Arnold Arboretum 2020). vitifolia (Host) Simonkai. The summer linden has a broad, ovoid to round crown and a rounded top. Each flower has numerous stamens (male parts) that are more or less fused into five bundles. European Lime. Common NamesGolden-twigged LimeGoldtwig Linden. It has young brown-reddish branches. Despite the common name, lime trees (of the genus Tilia) are not related to the citrus fruit we know as a lime. Beskrivelse Tilia platyphyllos 'Örebro' A slow-growing Swedish cultivar with a regular, closed, narrow, pyramidal crown that reaches a height of 15 - 18 m. The lateral branches grow steeply ascending at first and after about 10 years they bend, forming an ovoid crown. Petiole sometimes with simple hairs. It is also frequently planted in parks and gardens. A compact form, which is quite widespread in the European trade, apparently normally offered top-grafted to give a standard with a small ball-shaped crown. Schneid. & al. Davis, P.H. Selected by the Guillot-Bourne nursery, Jarcieu, France before 2012, and quite widespread in the European trade (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013; Guillot-Bourne 2020; van den Berk Nurseries 2020). Many cultivars have been named, almost all in Europe: Jablonski & Plietzsch (2013, 2014) provide a thorough checklist. Other more or less dwarf clones include ‘Belvedere’ and ‘Pannonia’ (q.v.). Featured: Lysimachia arvensis Published on the Internet http://www.kew.org/herbcat [accessed on Day Month Year]'. Tilia platyphyllos Scop. It is in flower from June to July, and the seeds ripen in October. Narrow crowned, unusual in its late, reddish-brown autumn colour; low susceptibility to red spider mite is claimed. It is in the European trade, and was propagated commercially in North America by 1959, when the Arnold Arboretum acquired a specimen (88 cm dbh in 2019 – Arnold Arboretum 2020). 2020). Tilia platyphyllos Scop. Another variant has very broad, fasciated, yellow major veins to its twisted and shredded leaves; a tree planted in the mid-20th century by the late Maurice Mason at Talbot Manor in Norfolk was 12 m, dbh 37 cm in 2008, and there was a much younger 8 m example at Common Farm, Semer, Suffolk, in 2016 (Tree Register 2018). It is beneficial in the treatment of diseases involving sweating for relief including Cold, Fever etc. Skin conditioning agent - miscellaneous: Tilia Cordata Flower, Tilia Cordata Flower Extract, Tilia Cordata Flower Water, Tilia Europaea Flower Extract, Tilia Platyphyllos Flower Scientific Facts: Tilia is a genus of about 30 species of trees, native throughout most of the temperate Northern Hemisphere, in Asia, Europe and eastern North America. A Kárpát-medencében jellegzetesen elegyfa, amely főleg gyertyános-tölgyesekben és ártéri ligeterdőkben gyakori. Kubát et al. When in flower the bracts almost exceed the foliage in coverage of the tree, making it look quite pale. corinthiaca), glabrous. Staminodes absent. In decreasing order of hairiness, they are: subsp. Tilia platyphyllos is commonly called bigleaf linden. Tilia cordata Miller, Tilia platyphyllos Scop., Tilia x Introduced by the De Martelaer nursery, Belgium, before 2005 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013; New Plants and Flowers 2015). Related Links. Trees from the Mediterranean edge are least hairy. Image Owen Johnson. Red-twigged forms occur widely in wild populations. ): this is not a very showy clone and unless new growth is regularly encouraged by pruning, it can be very dull indeed. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0, Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone See Kew's Seed Information Database for further information on Tilia platyphyllos seeds. Specimens of the wood and bark of large-leaved lime are held in Kew's Economic Botany Collection in the Sir Joseph Banks Building, where they are available to researchers by appointment. Buds with 3 exposed scales (2 in subsp. Still propagated commercially in Europe; ‘Delft’ is similar (van den Berk Nurseries 2020). Cut-leaved forms are discussed under ‘Laciniata’, and very dwarf forms under ‘Compacta’. Young leaves can be eaten as salad, and flowers have long been used in continental Europe to make a tea believed to have a calming effect. Bean (1981) felt that there might be more than one clone in circulation under this name. from Mediterranean Europe and Turkey. A slow-growing, bushy dwarf, originating in the Netherlands around 1925 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013; Geers. 20 m. The trunk is light grey and later grooved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0, Kew Science Photographs Tilia platyphyllos M.Bieb. Final . Caratteristiche botaniche: La Tilia platyphyllos è un grande albero a foglia caduca, può raggiungere i 40 metri di altezza, con chioma da largamente colonnare a arrotondata espansa.Corteccia grigio scura con strette fenditure. Dirr (2009) was unable to find the species, or any of its cultivars in recent American nursery catalogues. The details of some of these, including images, can be seen online in the Herbarium Catalogue. ‘Donovan’s Filigree’ (Royal Horticultural Society 2018) is presumed to be the same plant, and it is also circulating simply as ‘Filigree’ (J. Grimshaw, pers. As the common name suggests, it is noted for its big leaves (leaves are larger than those of littleleaf linden). Please enter the date on which you consulted the system. cordifolia (Besser) C.K.Schneid. The distribution range of the tree is more limiting than the very similar small-leaved lime. Bulgaria, Flowers large (12–17 mm diameter), saucer-shaped. Interpreting Wetland Status. A very slow-growing, compact, shrubby Czech selection, reaching around1.5 m height and spread (Bluebell Arboretum and Nursery 2020). C.D. Similar sports occur in several lime species Pigott (2012) but this is the only named form, and the only one to have been planted at all widely. Digital Image © Board of Trustees, RBG Kew http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, Kew Species Profiles Many cultivated forms and cultivars have arisen from Tilia platyphyllos but few are available commercially. A full-sized variety with a broadly ovoid crown, retaining its leaves unusually late into autumn; a degree of aphid resistance is claimed. platyphyllos Scop., Tilia x vulgaris Heyne or their mixtures, flos . Scientific name Source Tilia platyphyllos subsp. Tree. Its range extends further south than that of T. cordata, but less far north and east. PISTOIA. Found as a witch’s broom in an old tree at the Belvedere, Prague Castle (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). This graceful Broad-leaved Lime at Knightshayes in Devon may possibly have been planted as the clone 'Pendula'. Leaves:  Leaves are usually 6-12 cm long and hairy on the underside, especially on the veins, and have a sharply toothed margin and heart-shaped base. Floral bracts 6–11 × 1.1–2.2 cm, sometimes downy. Italy, Synonyms Tilia platyphyllos 'Corallina' Family Malvaceae Genus Tilia are deciduous trees with broadly ovate or heart-shaped leaves and pendulous clusters of fragrant yellow-green flowers, followed by conspicuous winged fruits Details 'Rubra' is a large vigorous deciduous tree of rather erect habit, the twigs reddish in winter. It produces intensely fragrant, yellow flowers in June and July and is, perhaps, the most fragrant of its species. 2020). Greece, France, One extreme form of this variant is ‘Tiltstone Filigree’ with remarkably deeply cut leaves; its habit is neat and narrow. Large-leaved lime (Tilia platyphyllos) is a large and long-living tree. Retrieved from "https://species.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tilia_platyphyllos_subsp._platyphyllos&oldid=7094615" It was found in a batch of layered trees, given to the Royal Horticultural Society’s garden in Chiswick in 1888 (Bean 1981; Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013), and grafted at Royal Botanic Garden, Kew, where material traceable to the original still grows (1972.12987; 21 m, dbh 58 cm in 2010 – Tree Register 2018); it is no longer a striking plant. 40 year old trees of Tilia platyphyllos (centre) and Betula pendula in secondary woodland on limestone (chalk), near Dorking, Surrey, England, UK. Tilia platyphyllos belongs to the Flowering Plants group. Hungary, (2002): Klíč ke květeně České republiky, Academia, Praha [as Tilia platyphyllos Scop. Upright crown, narrow in youth, with bright red branchlets in winter (Hillier Nurseries 2020; van den Berk Nurseries 2020). & Sutton, J. Tilia platyphyllos Name Synonyms Tilia grandifolia (Ehrh. Narrow-crowned, with leaves staying green late into autumn. A curiosity with twisted young shoots, sometimes forming loops. Tilia platyphyllos is a widespread and familiar species in Europe. For information about how you could sponsor this page, see How You Can Help. Flora Europaea 2: 1-469. Tilia platyphyllos subsp. Tilia grandifolia Ehrh. Tilia platyphyllos 'Rubra' has reddish twigs in winter and has been given an Award of Garden Merit (AGM) by the Royal Horticultural Society. At any rate, red winter twigs and an upright habit in youth are common to most typical Broad-leaved Limes in Britain (O. Johnson, pers. Each flower has a single, hairless style (female part). : Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (2001) Based on Article 16d(1), Article 16f and Article 16h of D irective 2001/83/EC as amended (traditional use) Final . Dense, compact, ovoid crown, consistent growth rate; an important commercial clone for street planting. The original in the Wageningen Arboretum was about 4.5 m tall after 40 years (Bean 1981). Probably introduced early to North American cultivation, Jacobson (1996) notes that it has long been common, although usually sold as T. × europaea; he records a 29 m tall (1987) specimen in Washington State. comm. Data retrieved on: 26 May 2019 Danihelka J., Chrtek J. Jr. & Kaplan Z. Tilia platyphyllos … ‘Laciniata’ is the most widely used name; perhaps a single clone; it was in cultivation (origin unknown) by 1844 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). All European species of Tilia are interfertile, meaning they can breed with each other, and natural hybrids are common, leading to difficulties in their identification. Grown in Germany since at least the mid-19th centuty, it has been quite widely planted in the United Kingdom; one had reached 14.5 m, dbh 64 cm by 2017 at Writtle College, Essex (Tree Register 2018). Narrow-crowned when young. Other examples include one planted in 1888 as ‘Aurantia’ in the Glasnevin National Botanic Garden, Dublin, 25 m, dbh 102 cm in 2018, and another at Ryston Hall in Norfolk, purchased from Späth in 1911 and 16 m, dbh 94 cm in 2008 (Tree Register 2018). Origin unrecorded, but there may be a clue in the name; introduced before 1991 (Hillier Nurseries 1991) and still in the European nursery trade. Tilia platyphyllos (large-leaved lime or large-leaved linden) is a species of flowering plant in the family Malvaceae (Tiliaceae). Each ovary has five compartments, each of which contains two ovules. Vigorous, narrow-crowned in youth. The tree in the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens, Hampshire, 16 m, dbh 72 cm in 2017 (Tree Register 2018), hardly deserved the epithet ‘weeping’. A well-known name in cultivation, ‘Rubra’ has red winter twigs and was recorded in cultivation by 1770 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). Regular, narrow crown, freely flowering. Image Owen Johnson. Marginal teeth with short mucronate tips 0.4–1 mm long. German examples include the Heeder Linde at Heede, 4.9 m dbh in 2016, and the Tanzlinde Schenklengsfeld, whose fragmented trunk is about 5.5 m across. (2020), 'Tilia platyphyllos' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.org/articles/tilia/tilia-platyphyllos/). platyphyllos Scop., Tilia x vulgaris Heyne or their mixtures, flos . Its wild origin is unclear, but it seems likely that this would have been a clone passed vegetatively between monastic sites – a cultivar. This plant has no children Legal Status. Bize nasıl ulaşabilirsiniz NÖ-Naturdenkmal KO-025 2 Sommerlinden sl1.jpg 4,128 × 3,096; 5.62 MB A young tree grows in the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens, Hampshire (Tree Register 2018). The summer linden has a broad, ovoid to round crown and a rounded top. Image from Stuppy & Kesseler©Papadakis Publisher. Bigger Bugger. Introduced by the Ton van den Oever nursery, Netherlands in 2002 and still commercially available in Europe (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013; Guillot-Bourne 2020). cordifolia (Besser) C.K. Of uncertain Hungarian origin, sold as a street tree by some large European tree nurseries around 2010 (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013), but now not or scarcely in commerce. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. Image Owen Johnson. from northern, western and northeastern Europe; subsp. ‘Filicifolia Nova’ is (or was) a variant whose leaves tend to be less deeply dissected (Bean 1981), while those of ‘Aspleniifolia Nova’ are described as more deeply cut. Romania, The latinized cultivar name is probably invalid (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0, © Copyright Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, IPNI - The International Plant Names Index. Leaves 6–11 × 6-10 cm, suborbicular and often with drooping sides; upper surface dark green, slightly rugose and sometimes with a sparse cover of simple hairs; underside mid-green, often with a cover of simple hairs and always with small denser patches of brownish hairs under the vein axils. The large-leaved lime, though, reaches slightly further south and is rarely found in Northern Europe. Its range extends further south than that of T. cordata, but less far north and east.It is a more upland species than T. cordata, associated with calcareous soils, but despite their habitat and morphological differences Linnaeus failed to distinguish between the two western European species and their hybrid (Pigott 2012). Tilia platyphyllos 'Laciniata' A Dutch selection with a compact manner of growth and an ovoid to pyramidal crown with a flattened top. Fruits:  The fruit is a strongly ribbed nut containing 1-3 seeds. Large-leaved lime is cultivated as an ornamental in parks and gardens, although not as commonly as Tilia × europaea (common lime). For copyright and licence information, see the Licence page. ‘Örebro’ is similar (van den Berk Nurseries 2020). Although less commonly planted in Britain than T. × europaea, this is a shapely, characterful tree, which does not produce masses of epicormic shoots (Bean 1981). Lime trees have fragrant flowers that are visited by bees. They include: ‘Barocco’ (A. Charlier, Belgium, pre-2005; variably cut leaves (les Jardins du Florilege 2020), some yellow spotting; ‘Capricio’ (Charlier, pre-2005, relatively large leaves); ‘Eniapseth’, (Charlier pre-2010, with slight variegation); ‘Erkegem’, (found at the Chateau d’Erkegem in Belgium, 1989; creamy-white variegation; possibly T. cordata misidentified); ‘Henryk’ (Bronislaw Szmit, Poland pre-1998; from a witch’s broom; dwarf and somewhat weeping – Szkółka Szmit 2020); ‘Mercedes’ (Charlier, pre-2010, weak, unstable variegation); ‘Pepi’ (De Martelaer, Netherlands, pre-2010; from a witch’s broom on ‘Laciniata’, dwarf with drooping red shoots; sold top grafted on 1m stem – De Martelaer Jo Nursery 2020)​​​​​​); ‘Stephanie’ (Charlier, pre-2010; variegated, with irregular yellow central zone). An older clone, narrow-crowned (at least in youth) with steeply ascending branches (Bean 1981; van den Berk Nurseries 2020). Habitat Woodland, mostly on calcareous soils, to 1500 m. Tilia platyphyllos is a widespread and familiar species in Europe. Tutin, T.G. Big Bugger. cordifolia (Besser) C.K. The Millennium Seed Bank Partnership aims to save plant life worldwide, focusing on plants under threat and those of most use in the future. Tilia platyphyllos 'Pendula' has spreading branches and pendant (hanging) branchlets. It is hardy to zone (UK) 5 and is not frost tender. The trunk is heavy and irregular, light grey and later grooved. Various forms with dissected leaves belong here (Jablonski & Plietzsch 2013); we discuss them collectively since many are not individually named, some names and clones are not clearly distinguished, and none are at all common. Image Owen Johnson. The heavy lateral Tilia platyphyllos is native to central and southern Europe (including Great Britain, where it is possibly only native in woods on calcareous soils). Tilia platyphyllos Scop.. Large-leaved lime. The common nameslargeleaf linden and large-leaved linden are in standard use throughout the English-speaking world except in the British Isles, where it is known as large-leaved lime. It is a popular domestic remedy for a number of ailments. A fourth, subsp. (eds.) Dimond around 1982 (Santamour & McArdle 1985); both clones had grown to 3 m tall at the Castlewellan National Arboretum in Co. Down by 2015 (Tree Register 2018).

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