Larix decidua P. Mill.
Family: Pinaceae
European Larch
[Larix europaea ,  more...]
Larix decidua image

Medium-sized tree to 20 m tall, trunk diameter to 0.6 m

Bark: brown, thick, furrowed, and scaly.

Twigs: moderately stout, yellowish, hairy, with numerous conspicuous leaf scars or short lateral spurs.

Buds: small, rounded.

Form: broadly pyramidal, open, becoming irregular.

Pollen cones: solitary, yellowish, small, egg-shaped to cylindrical.

Needles: deciduous, in clusters of 30 to 40 on short spurs or borne singly, stalkless, yellowish green, 2.5 - 4 cm long, more or less flat, with a central ridge running lengthwise beneath, soft, turning yellow and dropping in autumn.

Young seed cones: red, small, oblong.

Mature seed cones: woody, upright, stalkless, light brown, 2 - 3.5 cm long, oblong, softly brown-hairy, with bracts equal to or shorter than the scales. Scales 30 to 50, rounded, thin. Seeds numerous, paired, winged.

Similar species: The similar Larix laricina differs by having smaller seed cones (1 - 2 cm long) and shorter needles (2 - 2.5 cm). Also, its twigs and needles do not exhibit as yellowish a cast as those of L. decidua.

Habitat and ecology: Introduced from Europe, and widely planted in North America. An occasional escape from cultivation.

Occurence in the Chicago region: non-native

Etymology: Larix is the Latin word for larch, a tree that was valued for its strong wood. Decidua means deciduous.

Author: The Morton Arboretum