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An ash can be any of four different tree genera from four very distinct families (see end of page for disambiguation), but originally and most commonly refers to trees of the genus Fraxinus in the olive family Oleaceae. The ashes are usually medium to large trees, mostly deciduous though a few subtropical species are evergreen. The leaves are opposite (rarely in whorls of three), and mostly pinnately-compound, simple in a few species. The seeds, popularly known as keys, are a type of fruit known as a samara.

Selected species
Ashes of eastern North America

Ashes of western and southwestern North America

Ashes of the Western Palearctic (Europe, north Africa and southwest Asia)

Ashes of the Eastern Palearctic (central & eastern Asia)

Threats


The emerald ash borer Agrilus planipennis, a wood-boring beetle accidentally introduced to North America from eastern Asia with ash wood products in about 1998, has killed millions of trees in southeast Michigan, adjacent Ontario, and some isolated smaller areas on eastern North America. It threatens some 7 billion ash trees in North America. Ash is also used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species - see list of Lepidoptera which feed on Ashes.

Uses


The wood is hard, tough and very strong but elastic, extensively used for making bows, tool handles, quality wooden baseball bats, hurley sticks and other uses demanding high strength and resilience. It is also used as material for the bodies of guitars, known for its bright, cutting tone and sustaining quality. These properties make it a common choice for wooden aircraft construction, where it is used for parts of the plane that require crush resistance or particular rigidity, e.g. subject to loads from bolt tightening. It also makes excellent firewood. The two most economically important species for wood production are White Ash in eastern North America, and European Ash in Europe. The Green Ash is widely planted as a street tree in the United States. The inner bark of the Blue Ash has been used as a source for a blue dye.

Cultural aspects


In Norse mythology, the World Tree Yggdrasil is commonly held to be an ash tree, and the first man, Ask, was formed from an ash tree (the first woman was made from alder). Elsewhere in Europe, snakes were said to be repelled by ash leaves or a circle drawn by an ash branch. Irish folklore claims that shadows from an ash tree damage crops. In Cheshire, it is said that ash could be used to cure warts or rickets. See also the letter ash.

In Greek mythology, the Meliai were nymphs of the ash, perhaps specifically of the Manna Ash (Fraxinus ornus), as dryads were nymphs of the oak. Many echoes of archaic Hellene rites and myth involve ash trees.

Other name uses (disambiguation)


In North America, the name "Mountain ash" is applied to species of the genus Sorbus, more commonly known in the U.K. as Rowans and Whitebeams, and the name "Prickly ash" is applied to Zanthoxylum americanum. In Australia, many common eucalyptus species are called ash because they too produce hard, fine-grained timber. The best known of these is the Mountain Ash, the tallest broadleaf tree in the world.

Trees | Oleaceae

Fresnu | Ясен (дърво) | Ask (Fraxinus) | Eschen | Fraxinus | Frêne | Fraxinus | Fraxinus | Jesion | Ясень | Jesen (drevo) | Dişbudak

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Ash tree".

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