paulownia
{{Short description|Genus of flowering plants in the family Paulowniaceae}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| image = Paulowni imperialis SZ10.jpg
| image_caption = Paulownia tomentosa
| taxon = Paulownia
| subdivision_ranks = Species
| subdivision = Six to 17 species, including:
}}
Paulownia ({{IPAc-en|p|ɔː|ˈ|l|oʊ|n|i|ə}} {{respell|paw|LOH|nee|ə}}) is a genus of seven to 17 species of hardwood trees (depending on taxonomic authority) in the family Paulowniaceae, the order Lamiales. The genus and family are native to east Asia and are widespread across China.{{cite journal |last1=Barton |first1=I.L. |last2=Nicholas |first2=I.D. |last3=Ecroyd |first3=C.E. |title=Pawlonia |journal=Forest Research Bulletin |date=2007 |volume=231 |url=https://www.nzffa.org.nz/system/assets/2650/Paulownia-handbook.pdf}} The genus, originally Pavlovnia but now usually spelled Paulownia, was named in honour of Anna Pavlovna, queen consort of The Netherlands (1795–1865), daughter of Tsar Paul I of Russia. It is also called "princess tree" for the same reason.Rush Industries, 2000.
It was originally sought after as an exotic ornamental tree in Europe and Asia, and later introduced to North America in 1844. Its fruits (botanically capsules) were also used as packaging material for goods shipped from East Asia to North America, leading to Paulownia groves where they were dumped near major ports. The tree has not persisted prominently in US gardens, in part due to its overwintering brown fruits that some consider ugly.{{Cite journal|last=Hu|first=Shiu-Ying|date=1961|title=The Economic Botany of the Paulownias|journal=Economic Botany|volume= 15| issue = 1 (Jan. - Mar., 1961)|pages=11–27|doi=10.1007/BF02906759|bibcode=1961EcBot..15...11S |s2cid=40567325}} In some areas it has escaped cultivation and is found in disturbed plots. Some US authorities consider the genus an invasive species,{{Cite web|url=http://www.tsusinvasives.org/home/database/paulownia-tomentosa|title=Paulownia tomentosa|website=www.tsusinvasives.org|access-date=2019-12-20}} but in Europe, where it is also grown in gardens, it is not regarded as invasive.
Paulownia trees produce as many as 20 million tiny seeds per year. However, the seeds are very susceptible to soil biota and only colonize well on sterile soils (such as after a high temperature wildfire). Well-drained soil is also essential. Successful plantations usually purchase plants that have been professionally propagated from root cuttings or seedlings.[https://www.kalliergeia.com/en/cultivation-paulownia-3nd-part-paulownia-propagation Cultivation of Paulownia - 3. Sexual & Asexual Propagation] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211027225048/https://www.kalliergeia.com/en/cultivation-paulownia-3nd-part-paulownia-propagation/ |date=2021-10-27 }} www.kalliergeia.com, accessed 20 May 2020 Although seeds, seedlings, and roots of even mature trees are susceptible to rot, the wood is not and is used for boat building and surfboards.
Dimensionally stable and given its straight grain and light weight, Paulownia timber is extremely easy to work with and is reported to be resistant to decay, with good weathering characteristics.{{cite web |title=Paulownia |url=https://www.wood-database.com/paulownia/#:~:text=Paulownia%20is%20one%20of%20the,species%20in%20the%20United%20States |website=The Wood Database |publisher=Eric Meier |access-date=2024-09-08}}
Trees can grow to maturity in under 10 years and produce strong, lightweight timber, good as firewood, and with an even higher strength to weight ratio than balsa wood.{{Cite web|url=https://www.wood-database.com/paulownia/ |title=Paulownia {{!}} The Wood Database - Lumber Identification (Hardwood) Common Name(s): Paulownia, Royal Paulownia, Princess Tree, Kiri|language=en-US|access-date=2019-12-20}} Its density is low at around {{ Convert | 0.28 | kg/liter }},{{cite journal |last1=Koman |first1=Szabolcs |last2=Feher |first2=Sandor |title=Physical and mechanical properties of Paulownia clone in vitro 112 |journal=European Journal of Wood and Wood Products |pages=421–423 |language=en |doi=10.1007/s00107-020-01497-x |date=1 March 2020|volume=78 |issue=2 |s2cid=211028012 |doi-access=free }}{{cite web |title=Physical and mechanical properties of paulownia tomentosa wood planted in hungaria |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/317758862 |website=ResearchGate |language=en}} although significantly higher than balsa's very low {{ Convert | 0.16 | kg/liter }}.{{cite web |title=Balsa {{!}} WoodSolutions |url=https://www.woodsolutions.com.au/wood-species/hardwood/balsa |website=www.woodsolutions.com.au}}{{cite journal |last1=Borrega |first1=Marc |last2=Ahvenainen |first2=Patrik |last3=Serimaa |first3=Ritva |last4=Gibson |first4=Lorna |title=Composition and structure of balsa (Ochroma pyramidale) wood |url=https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00226-015-0700-5 |journal=Wood Science and Technology |pages=403–420 |language=en |doi=10.1007/s00226-015-0700-5 |date=1 March 2015|volume=49 |issue=2 |hdl=1721.1/102327 |s2cid=6546811 |hdl-access=free |url-access=subscription }}
Morphology
File:Paulownia imperialis leaf 345.jpg
Paulownia is a genus of angiosperm trees, and one of the fastest-growing trees in the world.{{Cite journal|last1=Zachar|first1=Martin|last2=Lieskovský|first2=Martin|last3=Majlingová|first3=Andrea|last4=Mitterová|first4=Iveta|date=2018-03-19|title=Comparison of thermal properties of the fast-growing tree species and energy crop species to be used as a renewable and energy-efficient resource|journal=Journal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry|volume=134|issue=1|pages=543–548|doi=10.1007/s10973-018-7194-y|s2cid=103106687|issn=1388-6150}} Paulownia tomentosa can grow over {{convert|30|m|ft|0}} tall and has large heart shaped leaves ranging from {{convert|10–20|cm|in|0}} wide and {{convert|15–30|cm|in|0}} long with a {{convert|10–20|cm|in|0}}-long petiole.{{Cite journal|last1=Erbar|first1=Claudia|last2=Gülden|first2=Christoph|date=March 2011|title=Ontogeny of the flowers in Paulownia tomentosa – A contribution to the recognition of the resurrected monogeneric family Paulowniaceae|journal=Flora — Morphology, Distribution, Functional Ecology of Plants|volume=206|issue=3|pages=205–218|doi=10.1016/j.flora.2010.05.003|bibcode=2011FMDFE.206..205E |issn=0367-2530}} The leaves grow in opposite decussate pairs, and as the name tomentosa suggests, are covered in hairs. The leaf margin can be toothed or entire and sometimes may be slightly lobed. They can be distinguished from common look-alike genera, such as Catalpa and Cercis, by secondary and tertiary venation. The leaves are late to come in on the tree and late to fall from the typically deciduous Paulownia. However, in tropical areas, the tree can be evergreen.
The leaves are often preceded by pale violet to purple-shaded tubular flowers, similar to a foxglove. Like most members of the Lamiales, the flowers are zygomorphic. The inflorescences are terminal erect {{convert|15–30|cm|in|0}}-long panicles of ~{{convert|5|cm|in|frac=4}} long flowers. The thick, fused calyx is covered by a brown hairy indumentum, and the fused calyx tube is the same length as its calyx lobes, except in P. catalpifolia and P. elogata, in which the lobes are shorter than the calyx tubes. The corolla has five fused lobes with a shorter adaxial bilobed lip, and a somewhat longer abaxial trilobed lower lip. The lips of all the petals are curled and their surface tomentose.
File:Paulownia tomentosa 2000.jpg
On the inner side of the lower trilobed corolla tube run two light-yellow folded ridges from the calyx to the lip. They are interpreted as floral guides to the top of the corolla tube. Inside the corolla tube, and approximately halfway down, are four stamen filaments fused to the petals at the base, with two being longer than the others. At the bottom of the corolla tube is a short corolla-stamen tube. The base of the stamen filaments are bent so that they run along the upper portion of the flower with the arrow shaped anthers then depositing pollen on the dorsal side of a variety of pollen-feeding insects.
The superior bilocular ovary, surrounded by the brown calyx, with its stigma and style rising up, is approximately the same length as the longer stamen filaments that surround it. That is left on the stem as the corolla and stamen fall off. The stigma tip has a singular small hole that leads to a tubular dilated chamber at the top of the style, covered in receptive papillae. In the species P. kawakamii, the stigma tip is slightly bilobed, which is a unique morphological characteristic distinguishing Paulownia from all of the Lamiales. At the bottom of the ovary is a nectary, with nectary slits on the basal sides of the ovary, beneath a hairy region. The ovary then develops into a sticky green oval capsule tapered at the apex with the remaining dried up style sometimes still attached.
The capsule remains on the persistent brown calyx where it can last on the tree through the rest of the year before turning brown and woody, and loculicidal dehiscence reveals up to 2000 small winged seeds stacked tightly inside. The tiny seeds have lateral wings that gradually increase in length around the seed. The ventral and dorsal side of the seed are flat. The wing shape on the seeds is another characteristic distinguishing Paulownia from the rest of the Lamiales. The new buds, enclosed by the early brown fuzzy calyx, are visible in late summer to early fall and wait dormant, alongside the brown seed capsules, till spring.
Fossil record
Paulownia once occurred in North America, with fossilized leaves being found in Tertiary strata of Ellensburg Canyon of Washington state.{{cite journal |last1=Smiley |first1=Charles J. |title=A Record of Paulownia in the Tertiary of North America |journal=American Journal of Botany |date=February 1961 |volume=48 |issue=2 |pages=175–179 |jstor=2439100 |doi=10.2307/2439100}}
Paulownia macrofossils have been recovered from the late Zanclean stage of the Pliocene sites in Pocapaglia, ItalyMessian to Zanclean vegetation and climate of Northern and Central Italy by Adele Bertini & Edoardo Martinetto, Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana, 47 (2), 2008, 105-121. Modena, 11 lugio 2008. and Paulownia caucasica macrofossils have been recovered from strata of the Serravallian stage of the Miocene in Georgia in the Caucasus region.The History of the Flora and Vegetation of Georgia by Irina Shatilova, Nino Mchedlishvili, Luara Rukhadze, Eliso Kvavadze, Georgian National Museum Institute of Paleobiology, Tbilisi 2011, {{ISBN|978-9941-9105-3-1}} It is believed that the climate then would have been suitable for the genus across the whole northern hemisphere.{{Cite journal|last=Smiley|first=Charles J.|date=February 1961|journal=American Journal of Botany|volume=48|issue=2|pages=175–179|doi=10.1002/j.1537-2197.1961.tb11622.x|issn=0002-9122|title=A Record of Paulownia in the Tertiary of North America|bibcode=1961AmJB...48..175S }}
Uses
{{More citations needed section|date=July 2017}}
In China, Paulownia ({{lang-zh|t=泡桐|p=pāotóng}}) is popular for roadside planting and as an ornamental tree. Paulownia needs much light and does not like high water tables.
As a forestry crop, Paulownia are exacting in their requirements, performing well only in very well draining soil, with summer rainfall or availability of irrigation water.{{citation needed|date=July 2017}} Paulownia is extremely fast growing, increasing in height by up to {{convert|20|ft|0|order=flip}} in one year when young. Some species of plantation Paulownia can be harvested for sawn timber in as little as five years. Once the trees are harvested, they regenerate from their existing root systems, earning them the name of the "Phoenix tree"{{citation needed|date=July 2017}} (that name is alternatively attributed to the belief that it is the only tree within which the phoenix will roost.){{cite book|title=Virtuous Women|date=1974|publisher=Kwang Myong Printing Co. Ltd.|location=Seoul|page=248|author=Richard Rutt and Kim Chong-Un}}
Paulownia is also used in Chinese agroforestry systems because it grows quickly, its wood is light but strong, its flowers are rich in nectar, its leaves make good fodder for farm animals, it is deep-rooting, and it is late-leafing, and its canopy is sparse enough to allow crops below it get enough light to grow while being sheltered from the wind.{{cite book|title=Temperate Agroforestry Systems|date=1997|publisher=CAB International|location=Wallingford, Oxfordshire|isbn=9780851991474|pages=170–172|author=Yungying Wu and Zhaohua Zhu|editor=Andrew M. Gordon and Steven M. Newman|chapter=5, Temperate Agroforestry in China}}
Image:Go-shichi no kiri crest 2.svg and the Order of the Paulownia Flowers and is a crest of the Eihei-ji Zen temple.]]
Paulownia is known in Japanese as {{Nihongo|kiri|桐}}, specifically referring to P. tomentosa; it is also known as the "princess tree". Paulownia is the mon of the office of prime minister, and also serves as the Government Seal of Japan used by the Cabinet and the Government of Japan (whereas the chrysanthemum is the Imperial Seal of Japan).{{citation needed|date=July 2017}} It is one of the suits in the card game hanafuda, associated with the month of November or December (some regions reverse the order of these two months).[https://www.sloperama.com/gostop/cards.html Go-Stop: THE CARDS] "...called hwa-tu in Korea, and hanafuda in Japan... NOVEMBER - PAULOWNIA (Korean: odong. Note: in Japanese hanafuda, Paulownia represents December.)" www.sloperama.com, accessed 21 May 2020
Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia states:
Paulownia wood is very light, fine-grained, and warp-resistant. It is the fastest-growing hardwood. It is used for chests, boxes, and clogs (geta). The wood is burned to make charcoal for sketching and powder for fireworks, the bark is made into a dye. The silvery-grey wood is sliced into veneers for special visiting cards.Japan: An Illustrated Encyclopedia (1993). Tokyo: Kodansha, 1993. {{ISBN|4-06-931098-3}}. page 1189.{{cite book|last=Lincoln|first=William L.|title=World Woods in Color|year=1986|publisher=Linden Publishing|location=Fresno|page=143}}Paulownia boxes called tomobako (ともばこ) protect ceramic works and other fragile items during shipment and storage.{{Cite web |title=Tomobako/Woodboxes - The Kutani Ceramic Website |url=https://www.kutani.org/spip.php?article34 |access-date=2025-02-07 |website=www.kutani.org}} The lid of the box usually tied down with a flat ribbon called a sanada-himo (真田紐). Japanese wardrobes called tansu (箪笥) as well as much Korean lacquerware is also made from the wood.File:Kobundo Japan.jpgese {{Nihongo|Kobundō|小分銅}}, 95–97% gold, "Paulownia" {{Nihongo|Kiri|桐}} mark, {{Nihongo|Kikubana|菊花}} emblem, 373.11 grams, Japan]]
It is important in China, Korea, and Japan for making the soundboards of stringed musical instruments such as the guqin, guzheng, pipa, koto, and gayageum. More recently it is used as body material for low-cost electric guitars,{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} as the core for lightweight touring skis,{{Cite web|url=https://www.powder.com/gear-locker/theres-a-tree-in-my-ski/|title=Understanding the Wood Core in Your Skis|date=2016-08-31|website=POWDER Magazine|language=en-US|access-date=2020-01-26}}{{Cite web|url=https://freeskier.com/stories/the-13-best-backcountry-skis-of-2020|title=The 13 best backcountry skis of 2020|date=2019-09-17|website=FREESKIER|language=en-US|access-date=2020-01-26}} and for surfboard cores.[https://www.commercialforestproducts.com/8-4-paulownia-homer-simpson-board/ Paulownia Lumber For Sale] 21 January 2019 www.commercialforestproducts.com, accessed 20 May 2020 It is typically used in guitars as the core body, then laminated under a more durable wood.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}
is known in Japanese as {{Nihongo|kiri|桐}}, specifically referring to P. tomentosa; it is also known as the "princess tree". P
Species
Tested and confirmed species:{{Cite journal|last1=Xia|first1=Zhi|last2=Wen|first2=Jun|last3=Gao|first3=Zhiming|date=2019-04-30|title=Does the Enigmatic Wightia Belong to Paulowniaceae (Lamiales)?|journal=Frontiers in Plant Science|volume=10|pages=528|doi=10.3389/fpls.2019.00528|pmid=31114599|pmc=6503002|issn=1664-462X|doi-access=free|bibcode=2019FrPS...10..528X }}{{columns-list|colwidth=15em|
- Paulownia kawakamii
- Paulownia tomentosa
- Paulownia catalpifolia
- Paulownia x taiwaniana
- Paulownia elongata
- Paulownia fargesii
- Paulownia fortunei — dragon tree.{{cite web|url=http://dendro.cnre.vt.edu/dendrology/syllabus2/factsheet.cfm?ID=895 |title=Paulownia fortunei Fact Sheet |access-date=2012-06-25 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131025031207/http://dendro.cnre.vt.edu/dendrology/syllabus2/factsheet.cfm?ID=895 |archive-date=2013-10-25 }}
}}
Potential variety, hybrid, and synonym species:{{Columns-list|colwidth=15em|
- Paulownia coreana
- Paulownia glabrata
- Paulownia grandifolia
- Paulownia imperialis
- Paulownia australis
- Paulownia lilacina
- Paulownia longifolia
- Paulownia meridionalis
- Paulownia mikado
- Paulownia recurva
- Paulownia rehderiana
- Paulownia shensiensis
- Paulownia silvestrii
- Paulownia thyrsoidea
- Paulownia duclouxii
- Paulownia viscosa}}
{{Clear}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category multi|Paulownia|Paulownia fortunei}}
{{Wikispecies}}
- [http://paulownia.info/paulownia-information Paulownia forestry information] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110824035457/http://paulownia.info/paulownia-information |date=2011-08-24 }}
- [http://www.chinesepaulownia.com/ Paulownia Research Center in China (Shaanxi)]
- [http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=124177 Flora of China - Paulownia]
- [http://www.paulowniatrees.org/ Paulownia trees.org]
- [http://www.silvatree.com/paulownia.html silvatree.com: Paulownia forestry]
- [http://www.fadr.msu.ru/rodale/agsieve/txt/vol4/issue1/1.html fadr.msu.ru: "Paulownia, the Tree of Choice in China"]
{{Taxonbar|from=Q165173}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Garden plants of Asia