Thuja occidentalis, a species of thuja, is an evergreen coniferous tree in the cypress family Cupressaceae, native to the northeastern U.S. and southeastern Canada, from central Saskatchewan east to New Brunswick, and south to eastern Tennessee in the Appalachian Mountains.
Unlike the closely related Thuja plicata (Western Redcedar), it is only a small tree, to 10-20 m tall and 0.4 m trunk diameter (exceptionally to 30 m tall and 1.6 m diameter). The bark is red-brown, furrowed and peels in narrow, longitudinal strips. The foliage forms in flat sprays with scale-like leaves 3-5 mm long. The cones are slender, yellow-green ripening brown, 10-15 mm long and 4-5 mm broad, with 6-8 overlapping scales.
It is known as Eastern Arborvitae, American Arborvitae, or just Arborvitae, the latter particularly in the horticultural trade. Other names by which it is known include Northern Whitecedar, Eastern Whitecedar (sometimes split into two words as "White Cedar", though this causes confusion, as it is not a cedar), and the colloquial "swamp-cedar". Thuja occidentalis should not be confused with the Chinaberry, Melia azedarach, an Australian deciduous tree also known as the White Cedar.
The oils of Thuja occidentalis can be found in organic solutions of medication that claims to eliminate warts, including the Human papillomavirus. No scientific evidence proves this claim. (Reference: "Forces of Nature: Warts No More")
Cupressaceae | Trees of North America
Abendländischer Lebensbaum | Thuja occidentalis | Żywotnik zachodni | Туя западная | Kanadantuija | Batı mazısı
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"Thuja occidentalis".
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