Exotic trees
by Lewis, 3 October, 2013, 3 comments
Our woodlands and hedgerows are filled with some twenty or so common or ‘native’ species (oak, beech, birch, ash, pine, holly etc.). However, if we look around in our parks, gardens, public places and the grounds of stately homes, we can find many hundreds of introduced or ‘exotic’ tree species, or variants of everyday species.
Where have they all come from? Some of these non-native or exotic species have been with us for a long time. For example, the sweet chestnut, which various writers have suggested arrived with the Romans. However, there are more than thirty species of Pine to be found in the U.K. - but only one is native, the Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris). Read more...