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Article from Bean's Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles
Recommended citation
'Fraxinus holotricha' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.
A tree at present about 70 ft high at Kew; young shoots with a close covering of very short erect hairs (velutinous). Leaves with mostly eleven leaflets, but here and there with five to nine or thirteen leaflets; petiole and rachis spreading pubescent; leaflets elliptic or oblong-elliptic to lanceolate or sometimes broad elliptic, acuminate at the apex and long cuneate at the base, mostly distinctly stalked (petiolulate), with the stalks up to 1⁄3 in. long, but sometimes almost sessile; the leaflets are mostly 13⁄8 to 23⁄4 in. long and 1⁄2 to 3⁄4 in. wide and widely serrulate to serrate, but sometimes up to 3 by 11⁄4 in. and coarsely serrate, sparsely pubescent above, more closely so on the lower surface, mostly on the veins and markedly so on the midrib, which is more or less densely spreading pubescent. According to Koehne the flowers have hairy ovaries, a most unusual feature among the ashes. Fruits not seen.
F. holotricha was described in 1906 from a plant first noticed in Späth’s. arboretum though others were afterwards found in the Berlin and Dresden Botanic Gardens, all under the name F. potamophila (a synonym of F. sogdiana, q.v.). The above description was made from a tree at Kew which was received from Späth in April 1909 and now measures 72 × 41⁄2 ft (1969). The native home of this species was not well known when Koehne described it, but specimens in the Kew Herbarium from Ilfov, Rumania, agree with it.
Synonyms
F. holotricha sensu Borza, not Koehne