44. MISC. PUBLICATION 303, U. 8. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 
Aesculus glabra Willd. Ohio buckeye. 
Range: 22, 24 25, 27, 29. 
Site: Well-drained, moist, sun, shade. 
Fruit: Capsule, available in September. 
A large, rapid-growing tree; fiowers April-May; short-lived; wood sometimes 
used commercially; flowers not showy. Young shoots poisonous to cattle and 
if forage is poor in spring cattle will eat them; later not attractive to livestock; 
hogs poisoned by the seeds. 
Several varieties have been described, a white-barked form, one with more 
pubescent leaves, and one with more leafiets. All are of more or less local 
occurrence within the range of the species except var. arguta (Buckl.) Robin- 
son, (A. arguta Buckl.), the shrubby buckeye, found also in region 30. 
Aesculus humilis, see Aesculus neglecta. 
Aesculus michauxii, see Aesculus neglecta. 
Aesculus neglecta Lindl. 
Range: 28. 
Site: Well-drained, sun. 
Fruit: Capsule, available in September. 
A large, very rare tree; flowers April—May. 
Var. georgiana Sarg. (A. georgiana Sarg.) Georgia buckeye; usually 
shrubby; occurs in regions 28, 29, and 380. 
Var. tomentosa Sarg. (A. michaurii Hort., not Spach, A. humilis Hort., not 
Lindl., A. rubra carnea superba Hort., and A. rubra carnea pubescens Hort.) in 
region 28 has very showy flowers. 
Aesculus octandra Marsh. Yellow buckeye. 
A. fiava Ait. 
Range: 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29. 
Site: Dry, well-drained, sun. 
Fruit: Capsule, available in September. 
A large shrub to small or large tree; root system shallow; rapid growing, 
short-lived; wood used commercially; subject to dry rot and stem borers; 
blooms April-May; a red-flowered form is known. 
Aesculus parviflora Walt. Bottlebrush buckeye. 
Range: 29), 30. 
Site: Well-drained, shade. 
Fruit: Capsule, available in October. 
A large spreading shrub, very showy during the July flowering period; com- 
monly occurs on rich soil. 
Aesculus pavia L. Red buckeye. 
Range: 20, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30. 
Site: Moist, shade. 
Fruit: Capsule, available in September. 
A large shrub to small or rarely large tree; ordinarily occurs on slightly acid 
soil; flowers April-May; very handsome in cultivation; a form with dark-red 
fiowers is known. Poisonous to livestock. 
Aesculus rubra vars., see Aesculus neglecta. 
Ailanthus altissima (Mill.) Swingle. Ailanthus. 
A. glandulosa Desf. 
Range 2 2a 0-.Ono kk i 20D toa Ota 
Site: Dry, well-drained, moist, sun. 
Fruit: Samara; ripe in September, long persistent. 
A large tree introduced from China but aggressively spontaneous and well- 
established in the range indicated; easily storm-damaged; rapid growing: cop- 
pices freely ; immune to the effects of smoke, dust, or insect pests; 14,000-22,000 
seeds per pound, germination 60 percent, about 3,000 usable plants per pound 
of seed; withstands considerable abuse in handling; staminate plant odoriferous 
in flower. This species produces wood even on poor soil more than twice as 
fast as any native tree having wood of anything like the same fuel value; wood 
ranked with that of black walnut or oak for fuel, excellent for cabinetmaking. 
Observations: Pine grosbeak, crossbill; white-tailed deer. 
Ailanthus glandulosa, see Ailanthus altissima. 
