Hoptree (Ptelea trifoliata) flowers and fruit. Upper right: fertile, bisexual hoptree flowers. Note the stamens with yellow anthers and the green pistil with a white stigma. Upper left: bisexual hoptree flowers post-fertilization. The ovary has both elongated and widened, forming the rudiments of the future fruit. Lower left: mature fruit consisting of a single seed forming a central bulge in a papery, flattened disc-shaped membrane. Lower right: clusters of maturing fruit on a very fertile hoptree.
Hoptree (a.k.a., wafer ash) is a large shrub with a rounded, irregular crown and (usually) a robust central trunk up to 6″ across. Hoptree may produce single-sex (male or female) or bisexual (male and female organs both present) flowers on the same tree. Individual flowers are about 1/4″ across, regardless of gender. Perfect (bisexual) flowers have 4-5 greenish sepals, 4-5 narrow, creamy white petals, 4-5 stamens with hairy white bases and yellow anthers, and a single, flattened green pistil. Male flowers are more or less identical but lack the pistil; female flowers are more or less identical but lack the stamens. The fruits are single seeds 1-1.5″ long with a broad, flattened, papery wing extending almost all the way around the seed.
Hoptree (Ptelea trifoliata) leaves. As implied by the species name, the leaves are trifoliate, palmately-compound; the leaves are alternate on the branches. The leaves are quite unmistakable.
Hoptree (a.k.a., wafer ash) is a large shrub with a rounded, irregular crown and (usually) a robust central trunk up to 6″ across. The bark covering the larger branches and the trunk is grey; smaller branches have smoother bark that is grey-brown. As implied by the species name, the leaves are trifoliate-compound; the leaves are alternate on the branches. The leaflets are 2-4 long and 1-2″ across, sessile on the tip of the leaf petiole, with smooth or slightly toothed margins; the leaflets have wedge-shaped bases and slender, pointed tips.
A single hoptree (Ptelea trifoliata) in full flower growing on the south shore of the cove due west of the Driving Range parking lot.
Hoptree (a.k.a., wafer ash) is a large shrub with a rounded, irregular crown and (usually) a robust central trunk up to 6″ across. The bark covering the larger branches and the trunk is grey; smaller branches have smoother bark that is grey-brown. As implied by the species name, the leaves are trifoliate-compound; the leaves are alternate on the branches. The leaflets are 2-4 long and 1-2″ across, sessile on the tip of the leaf petiole, with smooth or slightly toothed margins; the leaflets have wedge-shaped bases and slender, pointed tips.
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