Velvet Ash Trees
Arizona ("Velvet") Ash (Fraxinus SPP)Main sources: Petrides, George & Olivia Petrides, 1992, A Field Guide to Western Trees, pp., Houghton-Mifflin; Zimmerman, Robert, 1969, Plant Ecology of an Arid Basin Tres Alamos-Redington Area Southe
http://www.saguaro-juniper.com/i_and_i/trees&s...
Fraxinus velutina Velvet AshFamily: Oleaceae
Native To: North America
Native Habitat: Stream and wash banks of southwest mountains and desert grassland
Growth Habit: Large deciduous tree
Flowering: Green, inconspicuous sprin
http://arboretum.arizona.edu/taxa/Fraxinus_velutin...
Fraxinus velutina: Velvet AshEdward F. Gilman and Dennis G. Watson2
Introduction
This fast-growing, deciduous, native North American tree reaches a height of 30 to 50 feet, depending upon cultural conditions. It is capable of
http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/st271
Velvet AshHere in Tucson, Velvet Ash (Fraxinus velutina) trees are common in large, sandy washes with underground water and along streams in rocky canyons. These riparian trees only grow in locations where they
http://fireflyforest.net/firefly/2005/07/18/velvet...
Velvet Ash (Fraxinus velutina)Tree with open, rounded crown of spreading branches. Height is 40 ft. (12 m). Diameter is 1 ft. (0.3 m). Leaves are 3–6 in. (7.5–15 cm) long, pinnately compound. They are lance-shaped to elliptica
http://www.enmu.edu/about/map/tree/10.shtml