Boxelder trees reach respectable sizes — up to 60 feet tall and with a trunk up to 4.5 feet in diameter (although three feet is more typical). Branching is rapid such that the crown may be wider than the tree is tall. Boxelder is dioecious — trees either produce all male (staminate) or all female (pistillate) flowers. Neither male or female flowers have petals; both consist of drooping, hairy filaments that bear either five reddish-brown anthers (male as in the image) or a greenish-white, deeply-forked style (female). The flowers are wind pollinated.
The distinctive compound leaves of boxelder (Acer negundo).
Boxelder leaves are opposite; they are compound and odd-pinnate with 3-7 (usually 3-5) leaflets. The leaflets are 2-4″ long and half as wide, with smooth to sparsely-toothed margins, the underside paler than the top side, and tapering rapidly to a sharp tip. The odd (apical) leaflet is often shallowly lobed into one central and two lateral parts.
Boxelder (Acer negundo) flowers and leaves, with a male goldfinch for color.
Boxelder trees reach respectable sizes — up to 60 feet tall and with a trunk up to 4.5 feet in diameter (although three feet is more typical). The bark is grey with shallow furrows in young trees but light brown with blocky vertical ridges and furrows in mature trees; new twigs are olive green. Branching is rapid such that the crown may be wider than the tree is tall. Boxelder wood is soft and brittle so broken branches are common, but the trees can live to be a century old.
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