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Thursday 14 May 2020

Do Lime trees set seed?

Has anyone ever found a self-seeded Lime (Tilia) sapling?
I am wondering if our changing climate may be encouraging germination.

All Lime trees in the valley will have been planted but the other day I saw two saplings in separate places which appear to be self-seeded, one of  which I think is Common Lime (Tilia x europaea).
The other with the heart shaped base leaf and stem dieback could be a Small-Leaved Lime (Tilia cordata).

Lime trees need long hot summers to set viable seed and the genus is on the northern edge of its range in the UK.
I have never seen a self-seeded one anywhere.

The Flora of Cumbria says about Small-Leaved Lime in the Lake District
"The individual trees can fairly be described as potentially immortal.
The massive bases have been dated by C.D. Pigott as up to 2,300 years old.
Pigott has demonstrated that most of these old 'bases' are of root tissue rather than shoot.
When trees fall, they sprout freely from the base and if the original trunk remains partly rooted,
shoots grow up from the crown and may eventually root and form individual trees."

It was also shown that Cumbrian populations of Tilia cordata only produce viable seed in exceptionally warm years and the trees must be considered relicts from the post-glacial warm period, possibly even from 3,000 BC.

Tilia x europaea ?


Tilia cordata ?

3 comments:

  1. Not that I know of Philip. I'm on the look-out. There are plenty of limes planted in Calderdale parks but mostly within areas that are regularly mown !

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  2. Yes. In the 1990s I had in my charge the grounds of a school at Lightcliffe. There was a group of limes, and a couple of other scattered around the playing field. Under the group I occasionally found tree seedlings with unusual cotyledons. I knew the first two seed-leaves of most of our common trees that seed themselves in gardens and woods, but these were strange, being divided into fingers. I potted them all up and they grew into small saplings that were recognisable as limes; which of the Tilia species I wouldn't like to say. I still have them, never having had a space big enough to plant them out. I'll post a picture or two.

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  3. Thats interesting about how long they can live and regenerate from their bases indefinitely.

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