Platanus occidentalis (Buttonwood, American Sycamore, Western Plane Tree, Sycamore)


Michael's Opinion

A fast growing hard wood with outstanding bark, multi-coloured looking branches, and interesting pendulous orbicular fruit.

Botanical Information

FamilyPlatanaceae
GenusPlatanus
Speciesoccidentalis
CategoryWoody
OriginFossils dated to the Cretaceous found in the arctic period regions suggest P. occidentalis grew throughout the northern hemisphere during the Tertiary period.
Pronunciation

Details

USDA Hardiness Zone4a
USDA Hardiness Ref.
Canadian Hardiness Zone5
Canada Hardiness Ref.
RHS Hardiness Ref.
Temperature (°C)-26 C
Temperature (°F)-20 F
Height35 m
Spread30 m
GrowthFast
Flowering PeriodApril

Description and Growing Information

General DescriptionIn North America P. occidentalis is one of the largest broad leafed trees. With no terminal buds it has an interesting zigzag appearance to the branching.
ID CharacteristicOften confused with P. x acerfolia, P. occidentalis has singular fruit and leaf lobes that are wider than long. P. x acerifolia bears fruit in pairs.
ShapeBroad and rounded at maturity.
LandscapeSince P. occidentalis is salt and drought tolerant, it is often used as a street tree or lawn tree in difficult situations.
PropagationBy hardwood cuttings in autumn, leafy softwood cuttings in spring, or seed, however seeds require light to germinate.
CultivationPrefers rich, moist, well draining soils in full sun.
PestsPlane wilt (Ceratocytis platani), anthracnose, powdery mildew, American plum borer, and sycamore lace bug.
Notable SpecimensHeritage Trees in Elgin County have noted a specimen at Wellington Road at Dodd’s Creek, Ontario, on the south side of the creek.
HabitatFloodplains and low, wet, rich soil areas. Dominant in mixed forests.
Bark/Stem DescriptionMottled red brown scales flake off to show the pale inner bark.
Flower/Leaf Bud DescriptionSingle scaled, 6–10 mm, shiny red brown buds that never appear on twig tips.
Leaf DescriptionMaple like, 3–5 shallow lobes, 10-20 cm across, irregularly and coarsely toothed, alternate, bright green with a paler underside.
Flower DescriptionUnisexual with flower clusters on separate branchlets that bloom in March. Male flowers are 7–10 mm, yellow green, and appear on second year wood. Female flowers are 10–14 mm, red, and form in spring with leaves on the tips of older twigs.
Fruit DescriptionFruit hangs from 8–16 cm slender stalks. Fruit are orbicular, 2–3.5 cm in size and yellow to brown in colour and appear singly.
Colour DescriptionGreen leaves in the summer that turn yellow in the autumn with red buds and multi coloured bark, P. occidentalis has interest year round.
Texture DescriptionCoarse texture with its zigzag branches and massive trunk.

Photographs