Acer pensylvanicum, known as the striped maple, moosewood, moose maple or goosefoot maple, is a small North American species of maple. The striped maple is a sequential hermaphrodite, meaning that it can change its sex throughout its lifetime.
The young bark is striped with green and white, and when a little older, brown.
The leaf are broad and soft, long and broad, with three shallow forward-pointing lobes.
The fruit is a samara; the are about long and broad, with a wing angle of 145° and a conspicuously veined pedicel.
The bloom period for Acer pensylvanicum is around late spring.
The spelling pensylvanicum is the one originally used by Carl Linnaeus.
Small, finger-diameter sections of branches can be used to make whistles due to the ability to lightly bruise the bark, slip it off the wood, carve the whistle hollow and airflow channel into the wood, and slip the tube of bark back on.
Mammals such as moose, deer, beavers, and rabbits eat the bark, particularly during the winter.
Distribution
Ecology
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