Common Name: Littleleaf
Linden
Family:
Tiliaceae
This Tree in Colorado: The Genus Tilia includes mostly large trees
found in the northern temperate zone, with 4 to 7 native to North America and
none native to western U.S. However, American linden and littleleaf linden are
planted quite abundantly in cities and towns across Colorado and much of the
west. They tolerate urban conditions quite well. Littleleaf linden is a European
native similar in appearance to American linden, but with smaller leaves,
flowers and fruit. There are a number of cultivated varieties which enhance some
of the beauty of this fine tree.

Habit: Pyramidal when young; upright-oval to
pyramidal-rounded and densely branched in old age.
Best Advice:  This is a very good tree that
should be used much more, especially now that a grafted cultivar is available.
It is very tolerant of our soils and climate. Prefers partial shade or
partial sun to full sun; soil should be moist to wet.
Landscape Value:
Excellent shade tree for a variety of landscapes. Because of its pyramidal
shape, it fits into tighter areas. It does not provide an arching effect. There
are many cultivars. "Greenspire" is probably the most common. Other
cultivars are devoted to the density and growth habit of the crown and their
growth rate. It is difficult to tell one cultivar from another.
Fruit: Fruit is a small 1/5 inch nutlet, thin shelled, and without ribs. Color is brown to tan when mature.
Flowers: Borne in 5 to 7 flowered pendulous cymes, bearing pale greenish-yellow, leaflike bracts. Creamy-white to pale yellow perfect flowers.
Bark: Gray-brown, ridged and furrowed on older trunks.
Information sources: