You are on page 1of 1

Gymnosperms

Scientific Name: Thuja plicata


Common Name/s: western or Pacific redcedar, shinglewood
Description:

Trees to 50(-70) m tall and 200(-600) cm dbh, often


buttressed at base, with a conical to irregular crown; old
specimens frequently have many leaders and many dead
spike tops. Bark red-brown or (particularly when
exposed to sunlight) gray-brown, 10-25 mm thick,
fibrous with shallow longitudinal fissures, easily peeled.

Sun to partial shade. Prefers moist, well-drained, fertile


soils, pH adaptable. In the wild found in moist flats,
slopes, and banks of rivers. Can be maintained in a
hedge.

Hardy to USDA Zone 5 Native range from Alaska to northern California, east to
Montana.

Sun foliage differs in that sprays are more flexible and less planar, with smallest shoots
upturned and nearly round.

Seed cones are borne in the medial region of lateral spray branchlets, ellipsoid,
composed of 4 pairs of scales (2-3 fertile pairs) arranged in 4 ranks, 10-12 mm long and
about half as wide when dry and fully opened, each with a nearly terminal deltate
projection. Seeds 8-14 per cone, 4-7.5 mm (including wings), reddish brown.

Pollen cones 1-3 mm, borne in a cup formed by two leaf pairs at the tips of lateral spray
branchlets. Pollen cones are most abundant on sun foliage.

Habit: Conical to wide conical, formal, single leader, dense and full to the ground,
buttressed trunk, slightly pendulous tertiary branches

Habitat: S.W. Alaska Vancouver, B.C. - California


Phenology: Humid

You might also like