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			British Columbia Outdoor Wilderness Guide             |  | 
 
                   
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                            BIGLEAF MAPLE
 acer macrophyllum
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple is also known as Broadleaf Maple, 
                              Oregon Maple  
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple is well named as its leaves are enormous 
                              with stems often as long as the leaf  
                           
  UNIQUE 
                          FEATURES:  
                          
                          
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple is the largest and fastest growing 
                              maple in Canada  
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple has a narrow crown supported by a 
                              branch-free stem for half its length when grown 
                              in the forest  
                            When 
                              grown in the open, a few large, spreading branches 
                              support a broad crown  
                            Seeds 
                              are food for small mammals and birds  
                            Twigs 
                              of the Bigleaf Maple are food for elk and deer  
                            Often 
                              draped in mosses  
                            LOCATION: 
                           
                          
                          
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple is found in the southwest corner of 
                              British Columbia  
                            Low 
                              to mid elevations  
                            Coarse, 
                              gravelly, moist soils such as found near river, 
                              lake and stream edges  
                            SIZE: 
                           
                          
                          
                            The 
                              Bigleaf Maple grows up to 36 metres  
                            FLOWERS: 
                           
                          
                          
                            Small, 
                              greenish-yellow purple when young. The pollen cones 
                              are yellow in colour  
                            About 
                              3 mm across  
                            Hang 
                              in clusters  
                            FRUIT: 
                           
                          
                          
                            Two 
                              winged seeds that are joined as the base  
                            3 
                              to 6 cm, hairy  
                            Often 
                              stay on the tree after leaves have fallen  
                            LEAVES: 
                           
                          
                          
                            Bigleaf 
                              Maple leaves are thick, large (15 to 30 cm across), 
                              five to seven lobes  
                            Shiny, 
                              dark green on top, paler on the bottom  
                            Turn 
                              yellow then brown in the fall  
                            Will 
                              bleed a milky, sticky juice from the broken end 
                              of a picked leaf  
                            BARK: 
                           
                          
                          
                            Greyish-brown 
                               
                            As 
                              the tree ages becomes shallowly grooved  
                            WOOD 
                          CHARACTERISTICS:  
                          
                          
                            Close 
                              grain, moderate hardness  
                            USES: 
                           
                          
                          
                            Modern 
                              - furniture, interior finishing, musical instruments, 
                              flowers can be used in salads  
                            Traditional 
                              - wood: dishes, pipes, clothing hooks, paddles; 
                              inner bark: baskets, rope and whisks; young shoots: 
                              eaten; sap: type of maple syrup
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