Friends of Belfast Botanic Gardens

Tree of the month series - this series of short articles about trees in the Belfast Botanic Gardens is compiled by members of the Friends group and Gardens staff. We aim to build up to a comprehensive archive of trees in Belfast Botanic Gardens. Each article illustrates a tree growing in Belfast Botanic Gardens together with information from a range of sources. Where possible we will give the tree tag number - these are the small aluminium discs, usually fixed on the tree trunk, 2 to 3m above ground level.

Click here to view the tree archive

Tag 117/118

location:

54deg 34.995N

5deg 56.059W

Tree of the Month, February 2011

Fagus sylvatica

Common beech

 

 

Jon Pilcher

The common beech is a native to most of Europe including the southern half of the British Isles, but is not native to Ireland. It spread back into Northern Europe relatively slowly after the end of the last ice age and just managed to reach southern England before the formation of the English Channel. However by this time Ireland was already cut off by the widening Irish Sea and St Georges Channel. So, along with the snakes, moles, and nearly 400 plants, beech didn't arrive in Ireland until brought in, probably in the 17th century. Beech grows well in Ireland and sets viable seed. On the whole, individual trees are not very long lived as the species is prone to heart-rot fungi which weaken the trunk leaving it susceptible to wind damage. A particularly damaging pathogen is the bracket fungus Heterobasidion annosum (previously called Fomes annosus).

Beech is a popular hedging tree in spite of the fact that it is deciduous. This is because, in the juvenile state, beech retains its dead leaves through the winter, shedding them as the new buds open in the spring. A well maintained beech hedge will keep this juvenile state throughout its life, but if the hedge is allowed to grow into trees it will lose its leaves in autumn (see below). Beech casts the most dense summer shade of all the European deciduous trees. Only early spring flowering ground plants can survive under beech - notable among which are bluebells. The seed of beech is a small edible nut, triangular in section, known as beech mast. Beech bark is a very characteristic smooth gray. There are a number of beech trees in the Gardens; the tag numbers and location given above are for the trees photographed below, close to the Ravine.

Common beech in Belfast Botanic Gardens

Common beech trunks in winter

Winter profile of two splendid beech trees in Belfast Botanic gardens, close to the Tropical Ravine. Characteristic elephant gray trunks of mature beech trees

Leaves and fruit of common beech

Common beech hedge grown into trees

Leaves and fruit of common beech An old beech hedge that has turned into a row of trees and has lost its juvenile characteristic of retaining leaves in winter.

see also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fagus_sylvatica

Photos taken in 2011 in Belfast Botanic Gardens and at other sites in County Down. Copyright Jon Pilcher