Redwood, Dawn
Metasequoia glyptostroboides
Taxodiaceae - Redwood

Description

See also Baldcypress description.

Leaves: Very similar to baldcypress; opposite arrangement on twig; deciduous.

Twigs/buds: Persistent twigs light reddish-brown, hold buds and deciduous twigs; deciduous twigs green, mostly horizontal, up to 3" in length, ribbed with often 50 to 60 leaves, lack buds. Buds yellowish, non-resinous; opposite; egg-shaped to oval/elliptical, short (1/4"); scales reddish to yellowish-brown and keeled.

Flowers/fruit: Monoecious. Fruit a round cone up to 1" in diameter; with 20 to 30 triangular scales.

Bark: Reddish-brown to gray; fissured, stringy, fibrous; base is tapered.

Wood: Unimportant; purplish, brittle, light; heartwood decay-resistant; little information available.

General: Native to China. Prefers moist, well-drained soils that are slightly acid. Intermediate shade tolerance. Deciduous conifer (loses its needles every year).

Landscape Use: Planted occasionally in Utah. Intolerance of high pH soils is a problem. Prefers full sun. Strong pyramid-shaped canopy. Likely not as tolerant of high soil pH and poor soil drainage as baldcypress. Zones 4-8.

Cultivars: 'Bailey', 'Clark', 'Emerald Feathers', 'National', 'Nitschke Cream', 'Ogon', 'Prospect', 'Rowena', 'Sheridan Spire'.

Characteristics

General

Family Taxodiaceae - Redwood
Cultivar Availability Yes
Hardiness Zone 4-8
Type Conifer
Utah Native No

Growth

Growth Rate High
Mature Height High
Longevity High
Is Good Under Power Lines No
Crown Shapes Pyramidal

Ornamental

Bark Yes
Fall Color Yes
Flowers No
Foliage Yes
Fruit No

Tolerance

Shade Medium
Salt Low
Drought Medium
Poor Drainage Low
Alkalinity Low
Transplanting Medium