Japanese red maple brings fall color

Published 2:00 pm Saturday, August 27, 2016

August is all but in our rear view mirror. The summer came, shared and now is planning to depart. We are bit older and wiser, yet still enjoying every opportunity to get into the great outdoors. Let’s review another tree that catches much attention in the landscape.

The Japanese red maple is a showy and versatile species with landscape beauty and curb appeal exhibiting an authoritative display of seasonal and fall color, This species (Acer palmatum) of woody plants is native to Japan, North Korea, South Korea, China, eastern Mongolia, and southeast Russia.

Many different cultivars have been selected throughout the years and are grown around the world for their attractive leaf shapes and colors. They are in high demand and are quite expensive (especially if you factor in their smaller stature), and are used as a single specimen or in borders and groupings making them an excellent focal point in landscape design.

The Japanese maple is a deciduous shrub to small tree reaching a height of 15 to 30 feet with a single trunk for tree form or multiple trunks joining close to the ground as shrubs. Its growth habit is hemisphere-shaped (young age) and develops into a dome-like form upon maturity with a spread of about 20 feet. The leaves are 2 to 5 inches in length and width, and palmately lobed with five, seven, or nine acutely pointed lobes. The flowers are produced in small cymes with the individual flowers having five red or purple sepals and five whitish petals. The fruit is a pair of winged samaras, each measuring one-inch in length with a quarter-inch seed which requires stratification to germinate. In nature, the Japanese maple displays considerable genetic variation in offspring as seedlings from the same parent tree exhibit differences in leaf size, shape, and color.

Three subspecies are recognized including Acer palmatum subsp. palmatum (leaves are small, 2 to 3 inches wide with five or seven lobes and double-serrate margins, found at lower altitudes), Acer palmatum subsp. amoenum (leaves are larger, 2 ½ to 5 inches wide with seven or nine lobes and single-serrate margins, found at higher altitudes), and Acer palmatum subsp. matsumurae (leaves are larger, 2 ½ to 5 inches wide, with seven lobes and double-serrate margins, found at higher altitudes).

Many cultivars are currently available in the market and they are popular plants in garden centers and retail stores. The red-leafed cultivars are the most popular among consumers with the cascading green shrubs displaying deeply dissected leaves also in demand. Preparations from the branches and leaves are used as medicinal treatments in the traditional Chinese culture.

Hundreds of named cultivars of Acer palmatum have been released throughout the world presenting numerous colors, forms, leaf types, sizes, and optimum growing conditions. Some cultivars tolerate sun and others prefer shade and almost all of them are adaptable to and blend in with companion plants. The tree forms are particularly ideal for borders and ornamental paths because their root systems are compact and non-invasive. Favorable conditions include well-drained soils and following recommended cultural practices (do not over-fertilize, over-water, or incorrectly prune). Also, several varieties can be successfully grown in containers as specimen plants.

Popular cultivars (some with the AGM label indicating the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit) include Aka shigitatsu sawa (pinkish-white leaves with green veins), Ao ba jo (a dwarf with bronze-green summer foliage), Atropurpureum (wine-red, including new branches), Bloodgood (an improved cultivar of Atropurpureum, AGM), Burgundy lace (AGM), Butterfly (small leaves with white borders), and Chitose-Yama (AGM).

Also, Dissectum (lace-like leaves and drooping habit, AGM), Dissectum atropurpureum (AGM), Dissectum atropurpureum ‘Garnet’ (AGM), Dissectum atropurpureum ‘Inaba-Shidare’ (AGM), Dissectum ‘Crimson Queen’ (AGM), Dissectum ‘Seiryu’ (a green, tree-like shrub with finely dissected leaves, AGM), Emperor 1, Golden Pond (greenish-yellow summer foliage), Goshiki koto hime (a delicate, variegated dwarf), Higasa yama (crinkled leaves variegated with yellow), and Beni Schichihenge (blue-green leaves variegated in shades of pink and cream and shades of orange and gold in fall).

Also, Hogyuko (rich green leaves, turning orange in the fall), Hupp’s Dwarf (a small, dense shrub with miniature leaves), Issai nishiki kawazu (very rough, rigid bark), Kagiri nishiki (similar to Butterfly but with more pinkish tones), Karasu gawa (slow-growing, variegated with brilliant pink and white), Katsura (yellow-green leaves tipped with orange, AGM), Koto no ito (light green, thread-like leaves), Little Princess (a sparsely branched dwarf with irregular habit), and Mama (shrubby dwarf with variable foliage).

Also, Masu murasaki (a compact, shrubby tree with purple leaves), Mizu kuguri (orange-tinted new growth and very wide growth habit), Nigrum (deep purple leaves turning to crimson, AGM), Nishiki gawa (pinetree-like bark, great for bonsai), Nomura nishiki (dark purple, lace-like leaves), Ojishi (tiny dwarf, very slow growing), Osakazuki (tree-like shrub with spectacular fall color, AGM), Peaches and Cream (pinkish-white leaves with green veins), and Pink Filigree (finely dissected, brownish-pink leaves).

Also, Red Filigree Lace (delicate, finely dissected, dark purple), Red Pygmy (AGM), Sango kaku (coral-bark maple with pinkish-red bark, AGM), Shaina (dwarf from Bloodgood), Shindeshojo (AGM), Shikage ori nishiki (vase-shaped shrub with dull purple foliage), Shishigashira (AGM), and Villa Taranto (deeply cut, spidery leaves that emerge pink in spring, fade to bright green in summer, then turn to golden yellow in the fall).

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Properly research the Japanese maples and determine what characteristics and features are desirable to you. Then select the proper placement for them in your landscape through the application of appropriate landscape design principles. Also, proper installation and maintenance are essentials since your investment is so significant.

Always think in terms of native and sustainable plants in the landscape.

Seagle is a sustainability associate, golf environment organization (Scotland), agronomist and horticulturalist, CSI: Seagle (Consulting Services International), professor emeritus and honorary alumnus, Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, and associate editor of The Golf Course, International Journal of Golf Science. Reach him at csi_seagle@yahoo.com.