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Tulip Trees, Liriodendron tulipifera & Liriodendron chinense
2001
The North American species of tulip tree, Liriodendron tulipifera,
was first introduced to Britain in 1688 and a specimen planted in
the 1770’s still grows in the Azalea Garden off Princess Walk.
The Chinese tulip tree, Liriodendron chinense, a far superior
species, wasn’t introduced until 1901 by Ernest Wilson.
In 1996 an expedition from Kew to Dabashan in Sichuan, China collected
seeds from a single specimen found in primary forest. The seed produced
only a handful of young trees, so in 1999 the Kew team revisited
the Dabashan area and from co-ordinates using GPS taken in 1996
found the same tree standing alone as an isolated specimen, since
most of the large surrounding trees had been felled for timber.
The tall tree had been retained and used as an anchor for a skyline
to extract timber to the roadside and had produced lots of good
seed from the stress placed upon it.
In 2001, from this second seed collection, 28 young trees were
planted to recreate the old “Tulip Tree Avenue” in the
arboretum at Kew, albeit with the Chinese species instead of the
North American.
This is a very rare, threatened tree in the wild, fast disappearing
due to large scale felling. There are few trees in collections growing
from known wild origin and this mass planting represents a good
collection of genetic diversity, vital for the conservation and
the long-term preservation of this primitive species.
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