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English Elm Ulmus procera is by far the most widespread of the three species.
English Elms (Ulmus procera) were a popular tree for park and avenue planting in the nineteenth century.
Nearly seven hundred trees remain in the park, of which just over five hundred are English elms (Ulmus procera).
English Elm (Ulmus procera) The elm was comparatively rare until the 17th and 18th centuries.
Golden Elm tree on eastern lawn - north Ulmus procera 'Van Houttei'
The most common species are Quercus robur and Fraxinus excelsior, though in the past Ulmus procera would also have been common.
University of Copenhagen Botanic Garden, (as Ulmus procera 'Viminalis Aurea').
The causer is a mite and it appears to be restricted to English Elm Ulmus procera - the common elm with small rough leaves.
The elm avenues of Ulmus procera and Ulmus x hollandica are significant as few examples remain world wide due to Dutch elm disease.
An elm obtained in 1922 from H. Kohankie & Son was listed by the Morton Arboretum, Illinois, as Ulmus procera 'Purpurea', but without description.
Prominent survivors are remnant Radiata Pines (Pinus radiata), and English Elms (Ulmus procera) which formed a windbreak to the west of the homestead.
Often, not all the roots die: the roots of some species, notably the English elm Ulmus procera, put up suckers which flourish for approximately 15 years, after which they too succumb.
In 2007 the Swedish Biodiversity Centre's 'Programme for Diversity of Cultivated Plants' included 'Purpurascens' (mistakenly called Ulmus procera 'Purpurea') in their plant conservation programme.
In West Sussex the English elm (Ulmus procera ) is nearing extinction and it might be expected that the large numbers of standing dead trees will, at least temporarily, provide large amounts of insect food and sites for hole-nesting species.
However, U. glabra occasionally produces red- or purple-flushed new leaves; an elm in the gardens of the Hedvig Eleonora Church, Östermalm, Stockholm, is listed as Ulmus procera 'Purpurea', but in form, fruit and foliage it appears to be a wych elm with a purplish tinge to its leaves.