
SPECIES
Winged elm generally grows only as scattered trees in mixture with other hardwoods (14). It is not a major component of any forest cover type in the Eastern United States, but it is found in varying amounts in four major types (17): Post Oak-Blackjack Oak Society of American Foresters Type 40), White Oak-Black Oak-Northern Red Oak (Type 52), Swamp Chestnut Oak-Cherrybark Oak (Type 91), and Sugarberry-American Elm-Green Ash (Type 93). In the southern part of the Central Forest Region, winged elm occurs as a minor species in Post Oak-Blackjack Oak. From the Central Forest Region southward through Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Alabama it is associated with White Oak-Black Oak-Northern Red Oak. In the Southern Forest Region and within flood plains of major rivers, winged elm is found in either Swamp Chestnut Oak-Cherrybark Oak or in Sugarberry-American Elm-Green Ash. Here, associated understory trees are eastern hophornbeam (Ostrya virginiana), American hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana), and American holly (Ilex opaca).
via GBIF · IUCN · Kew POWO
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).