Transcript Document

The Small College Arboretum
How to establish it and use it
for undergraduate teaching
Michael F. Gross, Ph.D.
Georgian Court College
Lakewood, NJ 08701
http://www.georgian.edu
OUTLINE
I.
II.
III.
IV.
Introduction: definition, why
have arboretum
How to establish and operate the
arboretum
Trees for teaching
Other small college arboreta
GCC’s Arboretum





152 acres – entire campus:
½ landscaped, ½ “natural”
Established 1989
Approx. 2,000 trees in landscaped
area
$1,300 annual budget
No paid staff members
What is an arboretum?
“a place where trees, shrubs and other woody
plants are grown, exhibited, and labeled for
scientific and educational purposes.”
---The Dawes Arboretum
“a plot of land on which trees or shrubs are grown
for study or display”
---Random House Dictionary
Can Include:



Isolated Plants
Groups of Plants arranged for a
purpose
Nature Trails through natural areas
Why Have One?




Formal Education – Class Use
Informal Education – General Public
(Tax Benefits; Community Service)
Stimulate Interest in Woody Plants
Campus-wide (across the curriculum)
Influence Campus Landscaping and
Land Use Decisions
How to Get Started




Form Committee
Write Mission Statement
Develop a Vision
Develop a Plan
Committee Members:







Biology Faculty (Director of Arboretum)
Groundskeeper/Physical Plant
Advancement/Development Office
Alumni?
Art, English, Language Faculty?
Student?
Local Community/Landscapers?
MISSION STATEMENT: The S. Mary
Grace Burns Arboretum of Georgian Court
College, acting in harmony and
interdependence with all creation, has the
mission of preserving and enhancing the
unique botanical heritage of the former
Georgian Court estate and its gardens,
while promoting its use for education,
research, enjoyment and inspiration.
Species added to the four historic gardens
will augment the gardens’ authenticity. The
New Jersey Pinelands flora will be
maintained and expanded.
Additions to the arboretum will include
species that provide interesting colors,
textures and fragrances throughout the
year. Collections will be developed that
build upon the historic botanical strengths
of the grounds.
Need a numbering system (accession
numbers) for record-keeping, with
geographic coordinates:


Artificial Grid System: 100 m on a side
Latitude/Longitude Based: GPS unit
($200-$300 for low spatial resolution)
GCC Accession Numbers:
40’05.64 North Latitude
74’13.08 West Longitude
First Four Digits: 0564
Second Four Digits: 1308
Other Digits: Unique Number: 1 to ???
Sample: 0564 1308 816
Database Options:


Specialized Software (e.g., BG-Map
[www.bg-map.com]): expensive,
requires training, BUT designed for
plant record-keeping
Generic (e.g., Microsoft Access):
inexpensive, familiar to most people,
BUT users must create structure for
record-keeping
Plant Records: What to Include







Accession Number
Scientific Name (incl. var., cv.)
Common Name
Family Name
Nativity (tree is native to where?)
When Planted
Age




Ancestry (origin – nursery name,
etc.)
How acquired (donated,
purchased, cost)
Labeled or not
History (diseases, pruning,
fertilization, phenology)
Labeling Your Plants:


Display Plaques (only some trees):
$10; www.metalphoto.com,
www.precisiondesignsystems.com,
www.myplantlabel.com
Accession Tags (all trees): 10 cents;
engraver, 2.75 x 1 in aluminum tags, 3
in aluminum nails; Forestry Suppliers,
Inc.
Augmenting the Meager Budget:
Tree Donor Program
$500 per tree: college picks tree, place,
planting date; provides plaques, photo on
website, free replacement; donor can
specify language on donation plaque.
Use excess money to buy other plants.
Visitors When You Have No Staff:
Let the Website Do the Work






Arboretum History, Photographs
Collection Information: Species, Locations
Printable Maps and Directions
Visitation/Tour Times, Rules, Parking
Donor/Volunteer Information
Guidebooks at Guardhouse or Library
http://www.georgian.edu/arboretum
Visitors When You Have No Staff:
Rely on Students and Volunteers


Train students to lead tours – may be
paid as part of work-study
Volunteers: Alumni, Retirees, Local
Garden Clubs, Establish a Campus
Garden Guild
Tour Groups / Public Use








Local Community School (pay fee)
Garden Clubs (pay fee)
Girl Scouts
Pre-college School Groups
College’s Re-entry Women
Alumni (pay fee)
Casual Visitors (weekends mostly)
Students Collect Leaves for Projects
AABGA: American Association of
Botanical Gardens and Arboreta





$160 per year for <$100,000
arboretum budget
Newsletter and magazine include grant
and vendor information
Regional and annual meetings
Listing on website
Listserve
Organizing Trees for Teaching:

Create communities that mimic
real ones from different bioregions:
a coniferous forest, a hardwood
forest, a swamp. Include overstory
and understory trees, shrubs, herb
layer plants

Plant trees of same species but
different geographic origin
together to show phenological
or other differences. Our Tilia
platyphyllos trees in front of our
science building leaf-out at
different times.

Group trees of same genus
together to show
similarities/differences and teach
tree identification. Oaks, pines,
maples, hickories are common
throughout much of North
America and each genus contains
several species.

Variation within a species: Group
cultivars or varieties of same
species together. Fagus sylvatica
(European Beech; zones 4-8):
weeping, purple, weeping purple,
tri-color leaved, fern-leaved. Acer
palmatum (Japanese Maple; zones
5-8): dozens of cultivars available.

Include some “isolated”, “specimen”
trees so that the mature form/shape of
the tree will be seen in the absence of
competition. Teach how the tree shape
or form is adapted to its environment, or
for a particular purpose (see Niklas, KJ.
Adaptive walks through fitness
landscapes for early vascular land
plants. Am J Botany 84: 16-25. 1997)
Maximize Light Interception
Acer palmatum (Japanese Maple)
Maximize Mechanical Stability
Juniperus
virginiana
(Eastern
redcedar)
Metasequoia
glyptostroboides
(Dawn Redwood)
Students in the Arboretum



Map the trees and maintain database
Research on tree growth over time
(circumference)
Tree reports: each student does 1
page written and oral, brings in twig for
verification



Watch a tree weekly
throughout semester
Instructor-led tours at various
seasons: winter tree
identification, wind pollination,
fall color variations
Non-majors do self-guided
tour and answer questions
“Living Fossil”; “Male / Female”;
Distance Pollen Travels
Ginkgo biloba (Ginkgo); Zones 4 – 8 (9)
Economic Importance: Maple Syrup
Acer saccharum (Sugar Maple)
Zones 4 – 8; fall color
Deciduous Conifers
Metasequoia glyptostroboides
(Dawn Redwood)
Zones (4) 5 – 8; fall color
Taxodium ascendens (Pond Cypress)
Zones (4) 5 – 9 (10)
Taxodium distichum (Bald Cypress)
Zones 4 - 11
Dioecious Genera or Species
Diospyros virginiana (Persimmon); Zones 4 – 9
Ginkgo biloba (Ginkgo)
Zones 4 – 8 (9); can be forced; fall color
Gymnocladus dioicus (Kentucky Coffeetree) Zones
3b – 8; fragrant flowers
Ilex (Hollies); Fall/winter color
Juniperus virginiana (Eastern Redcedar)
Zones 3b – 9; bird dispersal
Nyssa sylvatica (Black Gum)
Zones 4 – 9; fall color
Sassafras albidum (Sassafras)
Zones 4 – 9; fall color;
leaf polymorphism; root sprouts;
Sassafras tea – carcinogenic?
Winter or Early Spring Flowering
Acer rubrum (Red Maple); Zones 3b – 9
fall color
Acer saccharinum (Silver Maple); Zones 3 – 9
Alnus serrulata (Alder); Zones (4) 5 – 9
Cornus mas (Corneliancherry Dogwood)
Zones 4 – 7 (8)
Hamamelis
(Witchhazel)
some flower in
autumn
Zones 4 or 5 – 8
(generally)
Grafts
Prunus subhirtella
var. pendula
(Weeping
Higan Cherry)
Zones (4) 5 – 8;
early spring flwrs
Other Commonly Grafted Trees
Fagus (Beeches)
Pinus (Pines)
Fruit Trees
Tilia x euchlora
(center)
Tilia platyphyllos
(left and right)
Asexual Propagation: Root Sprouts
Fagus grandifolia (American Beech); zones 4 - 9
Fagus sylvatica (European Beech); zones 4 - 7
Populus alba (White Poplar); zones 3 – 8 (9)
Populus grandidentata (Bigtooth Aspen)
zones 3 – 7
Populus tremuloides (Quaking Aspen)
zones 1 - 7
Rhus copallina (Winged Sumac)
Zones 4 – 9; outstanding fall color
Rhus typhina (Staghorn Sumac)
Zones 4 – 8
Rhus glabra (Smooth Sumac)
Zones 3 – 9
Robinia pseudoacacia (Black Locust)
Zones 4 – 8 (9)
Sassafras albidum (Sassafras)
Zones 4 - 9
Rhus copallina (Winged Sumac)
Features of a Woody Twig
Aesculus hippocastanum (Horsechestnut)
(or other member of Buckeye genus)
Zones 4 – 7; spring flowers
Spines and Thorns
Craetagus (Hawthorn)
Zones 3 or 4 – 7 or 8
Maclura pomifera (Osage Orange)
Zones 4 – 9; interesting “brain”-like fruit
Robinia pseudoacacia (Black Locust)
Zones 4 – 8 (9)
Maclura pomifera (Osage Orange)
Bird Dispersal of Seeds
Juniperus virginiana (Eastern Redcedar)
Zones 3b - 9
Morus (Mulberry)
Zones 4 (5) – 8 (9)
Prunus serotina (Wild Black Cherry)
Zones 3 - 9
Alien Plant Pathogens; Hybrids
Castanea dentata (American Chestnut)
Zones 4 – 8
Castanea mollissima (Chinese Chestnut)
Zones 4 – 8
Castanea mollissima x C. dentata
Castanea ‘Dunstan’; Zones 4 – 8
Native Tree Extinct in the Wild: Why?
Franklinia alatamaha (Franklin Tree)
zones 5 – 8 (9); fall color; animal pollination
Other Small-College Arboreta
http://scottarboretum.org/ (Swarthmore, PA)
Horticultural library, plant sales, summer concerts
in amphitheatre, workshops, internships
 http://arboretum.geneseo.edu/ (SUNYGeneseo)
Herbarium, LTER, extensive use for research and
education with examples on website, only 20
acres

http://www.gustavus.edu/oncampus/arboretum
/index.cfm (Gustavus Adolphus, MN)
Three ecosystems native to MN, interpretive
center
 http://www.hillsdale.edu/arboretum/default.htm
(Hillsdale, MI)
Extensive activities and events calendar
 http://www.jmu.edu/arboretum/ (James
Madison, VA)
Library holdings, forms for arboretum use, garden
histories

http://www.wellesley.edu/Activities/homepag
e/web/larboretum.html (Wellesley, MA)
Extensive listing/photos of information on
individual trees – very useful for instruction
 http://camel2.conncoll.edu/ccrec/greennet/ar
bo/welcome.html (Connecticut Coll, CT)
Activities and events, native plant list crossreferenced with nurseries

http://www.georgian.edu/arboretum
[email protected]