Tulip Polar, Liriodendro Tulipifera
Common Names: Yellow poplar, American Tulip Poplar, Whitewood, Fiddle Tree
Noteworthy Characteristics:
Tulip tree or yellow poplar is a large, stately, deciduous tree of eastern North America that can grow up to 200ft tall and 10ft trunk diameter. It is named and noted for its cup-shaped, tulip-like flowers that bloom in spring. Flowers are yellow with an orange band at the base of each petal. The flowers are 2” to 3” long, tulip-shaped, upright blossoms, borne singly at branch ends. They bloom in late may through mid-June. The petals are yellow-green and the inside of the corolla base is orange. Unfortunately most flowers are borne in the higher reaches of the plant and are not easily observed. Flowers are followed by dry, scaly, oblong, cone-shaped brown fruits, each bearing numerous winged seeds. Four-lobed bright green leaves (to 8” across) turn golden yellow in fall. Wood is used inter alia for furniture, plywood, boatbuilding, paper pulp and general lumber. Native Americans made dugout canoes from tuliptree trunks. This is the state tree of Kentucky, Tennessee and Indiana. Genus name comes from Greek leirion (lily) and dendron (tree). Tulipifera means tulip bearing.
State tree love!



