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Encyclopedia > Larix

This article is about larch trees.

For other uses, see Larch (disambiguation).
Larch

Siberian Larch, Larix sibirica
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Pinales
Family: Pinaceae
Genus: Larix
Species

About 12; see text


Larches are conifers in the genus Larix, in the family Pinaceae. They are deciduous trees, growing from 15-50 m tall, and are native to much of the cooler temperate northern hemisphere, on lowlands in the far north, and high on mountains further south. Larches are among the dominant plants in the immense boreal forests of Russia and Canada.

Enlarge
European Larch foliage and cones

The shoots are dimorphic, with growth divided into long shoots typically 10-50 cm long and bearing several buds, and short shoots only 1-2 mm long with only a single bud. The leaves are needle-like, 2-5 cm long, slender (under 1 mm wide). They are borne singly, spirally arranged on the long shoots, and in dense clusters of 20-50 needles on the short shoots. The needles turn yellow and fall in the late autumn, leaving the trees leafless through the winter.


Larch cones are erect, small, 1-9 cm long, green or purple, ripening brown 5-8 months after pollination; in about half the species the bract scales are long and visible, and in the others, short and hidden between the seed scales. Those native to northern regions have small cones (1-3 cm) with short bracts, with more southerly species tending to have longer cones (3-9 cm) with exserted bracts, with the longest cones and bracts produced by the southernmost species, in the Himalaya. In the past, the bract length was often used to divide the larches into two sections (sect. Larix with short bracts, and sect. Multiserialis with long bracts), but genetic evidence does not support this division, pointing instead to a genetic divide between Old World and New World species, with the cone and bract size being merely adaptations to climatic conditions.

Contents

1 External links

Species

There are 10-14 species; those marked '#' are not accepted as distinct species by all authorities:


Old World

  • Larix decidua (syn. L. europaea) European Larch. Mountains of central Europe.
  • Larix gmelinii (syn. L. dahurica) Dahurian Larch. Plains of eastern Siberia.
  • Larix griffithii (syn. L. griffithiana) Himalayan Larch. Mountains of eastern Himalaya
  • Larix himalaica Langtang Larch #. Mountains of central Himalaya.
  • Larix kaempferi (syn. L. leptolepis) Japanese Larch. Mountains of central Japan.
  • Larix kongboensis Tibetan Larch #. Mountains of southeast Tibet, northeast of L. grffithii.
  • Larix mastersiana Masters' Larch. Mountains of western China.
  • Larix potaninii Chinese Larch. Mountains of southwestern China (Sichuan, northern Yunnan).
  • Larix principis-rupprechtii Prince Rupprecht's Larch #. Mountains of northern China (Shanxi, Hebei).
  • Larix sibirica Siberian Larch. Plains of western Siberia.
  • Larix speciosa Yunnan Larch #. Mountains of southwesternmost China (southwest Yunnan), northeast Myanmar.

New World

  • Larix laricina Tamarack Larch or American Larch. Plains of northern North America.
  • Larix lyallii Subalpine Larch. Mountains of northwest USA and southwest Canada, at very high altitude.
  • Larix occidentalis Western Larch. Mountains of northwest USA and southwest Canada, at lower altitudes.

Most if not all of the species can be hybridised in cultivation; the best known hybrid is Larix x marschlinsii (a.k.a. L. x eurolepis, an illegitimate name), the Dunkeld Larch, which arose more or less simultanously in Switzerland and Scotland when L. decidua and L. kaempferi hybridised when planted together.


Uses

Larch is valued in forestry for its wood, which is tough, waterproof and durable, with top quality knot-free timber being in great demand for building yachts and other small boats. Larch has also been used in herbal medicine; see Bach flower remedies for details.


Links to other Pinaceae

Pinus - Picea - Cathaya - Larix - Pseudotsuga - Abies - Cedrus - Keteleeria - Pseudolarix - Nothotsuga - Tsuga


External links

  • Gymnosperm Database - Larix (http://www.botanik.uni-bonn.de/conifers/pi/la/index.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Larix description (610 words)
Larix is the type genus of Pinaceae subfamily Laricoideae, which also includes Cathaya and Pseudotsuga (Frankis 1989, Farjon 1990, Li 1993).
The taxonomic uncertainties are partly due to the lack of a recent monographic treatment of Larix: the last were in 1930 (Ostenfeld and Syrach Larsen 1930) and, in a Russian paper not then readily available in the west, 1972 (Bobrov 1972).
Larix occurs in boreal circumpolar lowlands in Alaska, Canada and Russia, and at moderate to high altitudes in mountains south to NE USA, the Alps of Europe, Mongolia, NE China, N Korea and C Japan.
Larix sp. - Larch (1458 words)
Larix is an unusual genus, one of the handful of deciduous conifers.
Larix bears bright green to bluish-green needle-like leaves that turn yellow in autumn.
Larix kaempferi (also called L. leptolepis): Japanese larch - the Japanese variety of larch is similar to the European larch in size.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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