![]() ![]() Tags: #hardy #deciduous #small tree #shade tree #small spaces #interesting bark #bonsai #winter interest #fall interest #street tree #nighttime garden #children's garden #playground plant #pollinator plant #courtyard garden #fantz #larval host plant #exfoliating bark #bird friendly #fall color red #fall color orange #woodland garden #imperial moth #patio #landscape plant sleuths course #wildlife friendly Profile Video: See this plant in the following landscape: Cultivars / Varieties: ![]() The Clemson Cooperative Extension Home and Garden Information Center has a factsheet on common maple diseases and insect pests. Insects, Diseases, and Other Plant Problems: No significant problems. See potential insect and disease problem fact sheets to the left. Buds: 3-7 mm, brownish-black, sharply pointed, scales imbricate.Conspicuous pubescent petiole and lower vein axils are present.Given its smaller size it is well suited as an accent tree around a patio, in a townhouse garden, or a poolside hardscape. Consider using it in a children's, nighttime, pollinator, or winter garden. This hardy tree is one of the last maples to develop fall color and the leaves persist into winter. ![]() The bark peels back in papery curls but remains on the tree instead of falling to the ground. Its most striking feature is its exfoliating bark which starts out as cinnamon-brown to reddish-brown and then takes on a purple-brown color. The recommended propagation strategy is by seed or stem cuttings young stems are the easiest to root. Balled and burlapped and containerized plants transplant well in the spring. It will grow in a variety of soil types, including sand, loam, or clay and is adaptable to a variety of pH levels. The paperbark maple prefers full sun to partial shade in moist, well-drained soil. The genus name is Latin for sharp and griseum means gray, perhaps alluding to the silvery gray undersides of this tree’s leaves. It has an upright oval habit and grows slowly to 20 to 30 feet tall and 15 to 25 feet wide. Paperbark maple, a small, woody, deciduous tree in the Sapindaceae (soapberry) family, originates from Central China. Phonetic Spelling AY-ser grih-SAY-um Description ![]()
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