Small-leaved Linden

Tilia cordata

''Tilia cordata'' is a species of ''Tilia'' native to much of Europe. It is found from Britain through central Fennoscandia, to central Russia, and south to central Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey, the Caucasus, and western Asia. In the south of its range it is restricted to high elevations.
Little-leaf Basswood Sap - Tilia cordata This was an odd sighting for me. I have never seen sap oozing out of basswood before.  Maybe the tree had been wounded.  Whatever the cause, it sure made these fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) happy...except perhaps for the ones that drowned in the sap!

Habitat: Growing along the edge of a mixed forest. Geotagged,Summer,Tilia cordata,United States,cordata,little-leaf basswood,small-leaved linden,tilia

Appearance

''Tilia cordata'' is a deciduous tree growing to 20–40 m tall, diameter 1/3 to 1/2 the height, with a trunk up to 1 m diameter. The bark is smooth and grayish when young, firm with vertical ridges and horizontal fissures when older. The crown is rounded in a formal oval shape to pyramidal. Branching is upright and increases in density with age. The leaves are alternately arranged, rounded to triangular-ovate, 3–8 cm long and broad, mostly hairless except for small tufts of brown hair in the leaf vein axils – the leaves are distinctively heart-shaped. The buds are alternate, pointed egg shaped and have red scales. It has no terminal bud. The small yellow-green hermaphrodite flowers are produced in clusters of five to eleven in early summer with a leafy yellow-green subtending bract, have a rich, heavy scent; the trees are much visited by bees to the erect flowers which are held above the bract; this flower arrangement is distinctly different from that of the Common Lime ''Tilia × europaea'' where the flowers are held beneath the bract. The fruit is a dry nut-like drupe 6–7 mm long by 4 mm broad containing one, or sometimes two, brown seeds , downy at first becoming smooth at maturity, and not ribbed but very thin and easily cracked open.

Habitat

The trees favour good, loamy sites, but can also be found on sandy, infertile soils, and are not thought to be drought resistant. Dormant shoots of ''T. cordata'' can resist winter frost temperatures as low as −34 °C.

In Britain ''T. cordata'' is considered an indicator of ancient woodland, and is becoming increasingly rare. Owing to its rarity, a number of woods have been given SSSI status. Cocklode Wood, part of the Bardney Limewoods, is the best surviving spread of medieval small leaved limes in England. Another site is Shrawley Wood in Worcestershire. Small-leaved lime was once regarded as holy and good for carving.

Trees in northern England were found to have established when the climate was warmer and have adapted to the cooling climate. Paleobotanical analysis of tree pollen preserved in peat deposits demonstrates that ''T. cordata'' was present as a woodland tree in the southern Lake District c 3100 B.C. In spite of the late migration of ''T. cordata'' into the Lake District, pollen diagrams from many sites show rapid expansion so that, within a few centuries, it had become plentiful and even locally dominant in the southern valleys. Maximum values for ''Tilia'' from all pollen diagrams available for the north of England show a conspicuous concentration of high values in the southern Lake District. At several sites among the limestone hills on both sides of the estuary of the River Kent, the curves for ''Tilia'', although beginning about 4800 to 4000 B.C. then achieve values of at least 10% within a few centuries. At Witherslack values of this magnitude persist for a depth of 3 m which represents about 4000 years. For much of this period ''Ulmus'' is approximately 10%, ''Quercus'' 20% and the remaining arboreal pollen is largely that of ''Alnus''. For a shorter period ''Tilia'' exceeds ''Quercus'' and reaches a maximum of 30%. The basin is about 200 m in width, so that with distance correction factors applied this indicates that the surrounding woodlands on well-drained soils contained ''Tilia'', ''Quercus'' and ''Ulmus'' in the proportions 4 : 1 : 1. Modern mature woodland trees were estimated to have germinated between 1150 and 1300 AD, making them around 800 years old. Precise age determination is impossible as heartwood at the centre disintegrates and therefore rings cannot be counted, and other methods are used.

Uses

''Tilia cordata'' is widely grown as an ornamental tree. It was much planted to form avenues in 17th and early 18th century landscape planning. A famous example is Unter den Linden in Berlin. It is also widely cultivated in North America as a substitute for the native ''Tilia americana'' which has a larger leaf, coarser in texture; there it has been renamed "Little-leaf Linden". It is popular as both a shade tree with its dense canopy, an ornamental tree with its architectural shape and a street tree. In the USA, ''Tilia cordata'' has been planted in Wellesley, MA; Modesto, CA; Chicago, IL; Indianapolis, IN; and Atlanta, GA as street trees. In Europe, there are espaliered trees owing to the ability to survive heavy pruning. ''Tilia cordata'' is an easy tree to train for bonsai when the training is not done all at once. Letting the tree recoup in between sessions over a period of several months creates a healthy, good-looking miniature tree. Prior to the advent of firearms, it was also commonly used for making shields .

''Tilia cordata'' survives best in a soil pH range of 5.0 to 8.0.and in USDA Hardiness Zones 3–7. The tree prefers moist, well drained soil, but can survive flooding; it is not highly drought tolerant. It does not do well in soils with high salinity.

Cultural

''Tilia cordata'' is the national tree of the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic.
The leaf of ''Tilia cordata'' is also considered a national symbol of Slovenia.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/tilia/cordata/?pile=woody-angiosperms
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderMalvales
FamilyMalvaceae
GenusTilia
SpeciesT. cordata