Northern White Cedar
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''Thuja occidentalis'', also known as northern white-cedar, eastern white-cedar, or arborvitae, is an evergreen coniferous tree, in the cypress family Cupressaceae, which is native plant, native to eastern Canada and much of the north-central and northeastern United States. It is widely cultivated as an ornamental plant.


Common names

Its additional common names include swamp cedar, American arborvitae, and eastern arborvitae. The name arborvitae is particularly used in the horticulture, horticultural trade in the United States; it is Latin for 'tree of life' – due to the supposed medicinal properties of the sap, bark, and twigs.''Thuja'', American Cancer Society, last revised 6/19/2007
available online
/ref> It is sometimes called white-cedar (hyphenated) or whitecedar (one word) to distinguish it from ''Cedrus'', a distantly related genus of trees List of plants known as cedar, also known as cedars.


Description

Unlike the closely related Thuja plicata, western red cedar (''Thuja plicata''), northern white cedar is only a small or medium-sized tree, growing to a height of tall with a trunk diameter, exceptionally to tall and diameter. The tree is often stunted or prostrate in less favorable locations. The bark (botany), bark is red-brown, furrowed and peels in narrow, longitudinal strips. Northern white cedar has fan-like branches and scaly leaves. The foliage forms in flat sprays with scale-like leaf, leaves long. The seed cones are slender, yellow-green, ripening to brown, long and broad, with six to eight overlapping scales. They contain about eight seeds each. The branches may take root if the tree falls.


Taxonomy

The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753. Over 30 synonyms are listed in Kew's Plants of the World Online database.


Distribution

Northern white cedar is species distribution, native to an area in the southern part of eastern Canada and the adjacent part of the northern United States. It extends from southeastern Manitoba east throughout the Great Lakes region and into Ontario, Québec, New York (state), New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Isolated populations occur in west-central Manitoba, and to the south in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Ohio, and Illinois and in the Appalachian Mountains of Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. In Canada, its range reaches the Arctic treeline and the southern tip of Hudson Bay. It grows mainly in places with cooler summers, with a typical temperature of in July, and a shorter growing season, from 90 to 180 days.


Ecology

Northern white cedar grows naturally in wet forests, being particularly abundant in coniferous swamps, where other larger and faster-growing trees cannot compete successfully. It also occurs on other sites with reduced tree competition, such as cliffs. Although not currently listed as endangered, wild white cedar populations are threatened in many areas by high deer numbers; deer find the soft evergreen foliage a very attractive winter food and strip it rapidly. The largest known specimen is tall and diameter, on South Manitou Island within Leelanau County, Michigan. Northern white cedars can be very long-lived trees in certain conditions, with notably old specimens growing on cliffs where they are inaccessible to deer and wildfire. As of 2008, the oldest known living specimen was 1,141 years old, but a dead specimen with 1,653 growth rings has been found. Despite their age, these very old trees are small and stunted due to the difficult growing conditions. These individuals' long lifespans have been attributed to their slow growth and their ability to survive when different sections of the tree are damaged or killed. The Witch Tree, a ''T. occidentalis'' growing out of a cliff face on Lake Superior in Minnesota, was described by the France, French explorer Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye, Sieur de la Verendrye as being a mature tree in 1731; it is still alive today. Specimens found growing on cliff faces in southern Ontario are the oldest trees in Nearctic realm#Eastern North America, Eastern North America and all of Canada, having achieved ages in excess of 1,653 years.


Uses

''Thuja occidentalis'' is a tree with important uses in traditional Ojibwe people, Ojibwe culture. Honored with the name ''Nookomis Giizhik'' (Grandmother Cedar), the tree is the subject of sacred legends and is considered a gift to humanity for its myriad of uses, among them crafts, construction, and medicine. It is one of the four plants of the Ojibwe medicine wheel, associated with the north. The foliage is rich in vitamin C and is believed to be the aneda, annedda, which cured the scurvy of Jacques Cartier and his party in the winter of 1535–1536. Due to the presence of the neurotoxic compound thujone, internal use can be harmful if used for prolonged periods or while pregnant. It is commercially used for rustic fencing and posts, lumber, poles, shingles, and in the construction of log cabins. It is the preferred wood for the structural elements, such as ribs and planking, of birchbark canoes and the planking of wooden canoes. The essential oil within the plant has been used for cleansers, disinfectants, hair preparations, insecticides, liniment, room sprays, and soft soaps. The Ojibwa reportedly made a soup from the inner bark of the soft twigs. Others have used the twigs to make teas to relieve constipation and headache.


Cultivation

''T. occidentalis'' is widely used as an ornamental tree, particularly for screens and Hedge (gardening), hedges, in gardens, parks, and cemeteries. Over 300 cultivars exist, showing great variation in colour, shape, and size, with some of the more common ones being 'Degroot's Spire', 'Ellwangeriana', 'Hetz Wintergreen', 'Lutea', 'Rheingold', 'Smaragd' (or 'Emerald Green'), 'Techny', and 'Wareana'. It was introduced into Europe as early as 1540. These cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit: *'Danica', *'Golden Tuffet' *'Holmstrup', *'Rheingold', *'Smaragd'.


References


External links

*
University of Michigan at Dearborn: Native American Ethnobotany of ''Thuja occidentalis''


{{Taxonbar, from=Q147468 Thuja, occidentalis Trees of Eastern Canada Trees of the Eastern United States Plants described in 1753 Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus Garden plants of North America Ornamental trees Medicinal plants of North America Plants used in traditional Native American medicine