Ulmus alata, the winged elm or wahoo, is a small- to medium-sized deciduous tree endemic to the woodlands of the southeastern and south-central United States. The species is tolerant of a wide range of soils, and of ponding, but is the least shade-tolerant of the North American elms. Its growth rate is often very slow, the trunk increasing in diameter by less than per year. The tree is occasionally considered a nuisance as it readily invades old fields, forest clearings, and rangelands, proving particularly difficult to eradicate with herbicides.
Description
As its common and scientific names imply, winged elm is most easily recognized by the very broad, thin pair of corky wings that form along the branchlets after a couple of years. The tree generally grows to a maximum height and breadth of about, although on fertile alluvial soils such as those of the Mississippi River Delta, some specimens have reached double this height. The crown can be either rounded or pyramidal; the branches are pendulous. The leaves are comparatively small for the genus, less than long and less than broad, oblong-lanceolate to narrowly elliptic, thin in texture, and smooth above. The leaves turn bright yellow in Autumn. The wind-pollinated perfectapetalous flowers are borne on long pedicels in March and April before the leaves appear. The reddish samaras are also relatively small, less than long, narrowly elliptic with two long incurving stigmas at the tip, and usually disperse before the end of April.
Ulmus alata is rarely cultivated beyond its natural range. It remains in commercial production in the US, and is occasionally available in Europe. At the beginning of the 19th century, the tree was one of the three American elm species cultivated in ornamental plantations in Britain, but is now rare there. Several specimens are grown in New Zealand.
Ulmus alata is of minimal commercial significance, its hard timber considered no more remarkable than that of other American elms, and of limited use because of the commonly small size of the trees. However, owing to its resistance to splitting, it is used to make high-quality hockey sticks.
Accessions
;North America
Arnold Arboretum, US. Acc. no. 404-95, wild collected.
Bartlett Tree Experts, US. Acc. no. 1438, unrecorded provenance.