Acer mono
Arbre à feuilles caduques (15m de haut).
Habitat
- Exposition
- Plein soleil ou mi-ombre
- Humidité
- Humidité moyenne.
- Sol
- Tous sols. Tolère les sols très argileux. Nécessite un sol drainant.
- pH
- Sol acide ou calcaire
- Rusticité
- Zone 6
- Habitat originel
- Mountains all over Japan[58]. Hillsides, mountain valleys and forests from sea level to 1800 metres in China[266].
- Origine géographique
- E. Asia - China, Japan, Korea, Mongolia and eastern Russia
Comestibilité
- The sap contains a certain amount of sugar and can either be used as a drink, or can be concentrated into a syrup by boiling off the water [105, 177].
- The syrup is used as a sweetener on many foods .
- The concentration of sugar is considerably lower than in the sugar maples (A. saccharum) .
- The tree trunk is tapped in the early spring, the sap flowing better on warm sunny days following a frost .
- The best sap production comes from cold-winter areas with continental climates .
- Feuilles - cuites .
- A famine food, they are only used when all else fails [179].
Usages médicinaux
- The leaves are an irritant [240].
- The bark is astringent [240].
Autres usages
- The leaves are packed around apples, rootcrops etc to help preserve them [18, 20].
- Wood - hard, close grained [46].
- Used as a fuel [46].
Culture
- Of easy cultivation, it prefers a good moist well-drained soil[11] and a position that is at least moderately sunny [11, 200].
- Pousse bien dans les sols très argileux .
- Chlorosis can sometimes develop as a result of iron deficiency when the plants are grown in alkaline soils, but in general maples are not fussy as to soil pH .
- A polymorphic species[58], it is closely related to A. truncatum [11].
- Most maples are bad companion plants, inhibiting the growth of nearby plants [18, 20].
Propagation
- Seed of this species is rarely available .
- If obtained, it is best sown as soon as it is ripe in a cold frame, it usually germinates in the following spring .
- Pre-soak stored seed for 24 hours and then stratify for 2 - 4 months at 1 - 8°c .
- It can be slow to germinate .
- The seed can be harvested 'green' (when it has fully developed but before it has dried and produced any germination inhibitors) and sown immediately .
- It should germinate in late winter .
- If the seed is harvested too soon it will produce very weak plants or no plants at all [80, 113].
- When large enough to handle, prick the seedlings out into individual pots and grow them on until they are 20cm or more tall before planting them out in their permanent positions .
- Layering, which takes about 12 months, is successful with most species in this genus .
- Cuttings of young shoots in June or July .
- The cuttings should have 2 - 3 pairs of leaves, plus one pair of buds at the base .
- Remove a very thin slice of bark at the base of the cutting, rooting is improved if a rooting hormone is used .
- The rooted cuttings must show new growth during the summer before being potted up otherwise they are unlikely to survive the winter .
- Grafting onto the roots of A. platanoides is usually successful, but the graft should be made as low as possible to reduce the incident of suckers from the rootstock .
Calendrier
- En fleur
- 4 - 5
- Maturité des graines
- 9 - 10
Pollinisation
- Type de fleur
- Monoïque (des fleurs mâles et des fleurs femelles peuvent se trouver sur le même plant)
- Auto-fertile
- Non
Divers
- Pollution
- Non
- Autres réferences
- [11, 58, 200]
Réferences
[11] Trees and Shrubs Hardy in Great Britain. Vol 1 - 4 and Supplement. 1981.
A classic with a wealth of information on the plants, but poor on pictures.
A classic with a wealth of information on the plants, but poor on pictures.
[18] Companion Plants. 1979.
Details of beneficial and antagonistic relationships between neighbouring plants.
Details of beneficial and antagonistic relationships between neighbouring plants.
[20] Companion Planting for Successful Gardening. 1978.
Fairly good.
Fairly good.
[46] Dictionary of Economic Plants. 1959.
An excellent and very comprehensive guide but it only gives very short descriptions of the uses without any details of how to utilize the plants. Not for the casual reader.
An excellent and very comprehensive guide but it only gives very short descriptions of the uses without any details of how to utilize the plants. Not for the casual reader.
[58] Flora of Japan. (English translation) 1965.
The standard work. Brilliant, but not for the casual reader.
The standard work. Brilliant, but not for the casual reader.
[80] Hardy Woody Plants from Seed. 1985.
Does not deal with many species but it is very comprehensive on those that it does cover. Not for casual reading.
Does not deal with many species but it is very comprehensive on those that it does cover. Not for casual reading.
[105] Tanaka's Cyclopaedia of Edible Plants of the World. 1976.
The most comprehensive guide to edible plants I've come across. Only the briefest entry for each species, though, and some of the entries are more than a little dubious. Not for the casual reader.
The most comprehensive guide to edible plants I've come across. Only the briefest entry for each species, though, and some of the entries are more than a little dubious. Not for the casual reader.
[113] The Reference Manual of Woody Plant Propagation. 1987.
A very detailed book on propagating trees. Not for the casual reader.
A very detailed book on propagating trees. Not for the casual reader.
[177] Plants for Human Consumption. 1984.
An excellent book for the dedicated. A comprehensive listing of latin names with a brief list of edible parts.
An excellent book for the dedicated. A comprehensive listing of latin names with a brief list of edible parts.
[179] Famine Foods of the Chiu-Huang Pen-ts'ao. 1977.
A translation of an ancient Chinese book on edible wild foods. Fascinating.
A translation of an ancient Chinese book on edible wild foods. Fascinating.
[200] The New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. 1992. 1992.
Excellent and very comprehensive, though it contains a number of silly mistakes. Readable yet also very detailed.
Excellent and very comprehensive, though it contains a number of silly mistakes. Readable yet also very detailed.
[240] Glossary of Indian Medicinal Plants (Including the Supplement). 1986.
Very terse details of medicinal uses of plants with a wide range of references and details of research into the plants chemistry. Not for the casual reader.
Very terse details of medicinal uses of plants with a wide range of references and details of research into the plants chemistry. Not for the casual reader.


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