Ulmus 'Crispa Aurea'

The elm cultivar Ulmus 'Crispa Aurea' was first mentioned by Schelle & Beissner in 1903, as Ulmus montana crispa aurea.[1]

Ulmus 'Crispa Aurea'
GenusUlmus
Cultivar'Crispa Aurea'
OriginEurope

Description

Schneider described it in 1904 as like 'Crispa' but with more or less golden leaves.[2] Elwes and Henry (1913) described the leaves as "yellowish".[3]

Pests and diseases

See under 'Crispa'.

Cultivation

No specimens are known to survive.

gollark: In the case where it's a language runtime doing it it is quite possibly just doing cooperative multitasking internally, yes.
gollark: These have been known to exist, yes.
gollark: Thusly, modern runtimes or high performance applications will do stuff asynchronously, where they just wait for arbitrary amounts of events at once in a small threadpool.
gollark: However, this is inefficient. If you want to serve 12904172408718240 concurrent connections, you don't want to have one thread for each, especially if each one isn't used that much.
gollark: You simply do a thing, and wait for it to finish, in your thread.

References

  1. Beissner; Schelle; Zabel (1903). Handbuch der Laubholz-Benennung. Berlin: Verlagsbuchhandlung Paul Parey. p. 86.
  2. Green, Peter Shaw (1964). "Registration of cultivar names in Ulmus". Arnoldia. Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University. 24 (6–8): 41–80. Retrieved 16 February 2017.
  3. Elwes, Henry John; Henry, Augustine (1913). The Trees of Great Britain & Ireland. 7. p. 1870.
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