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Slippery Elm & American Elm
Ulmus rubra Muhl., Ulmus americana L.
Ulmaceae
Image
Slippery Elm leaves and twigs, showing leaf venation, texture, arrangement on the branch, Photo credit: D. Botcherby 2022

Names and Their Meanings

Slippery Elm - Ulmus rubra
Kanienʼkéha
akará:tsi
Anishinaabemowin
ozhaashigob
French
Orme rouge
American Elm - Ulmus Americana
Kanienʼkéha
akará:tsi'kowa
Anishinaabemowin
aniib, niip
French
Orme d'Amérique
John Jamieson using an Elm bark toboggan to transport things, Six Nations of the Grand River, 1912, Photo credit: Frederick Wilkerson Waugh, Canadian Museum of History Archives and Collections
Model of a Haudenosaunee Elm Bark Longhouse, 1915, Photo/ model credit: Frederick Wilkerson Waugh, Canadian Museum of History Archives and Collections
Mrs. David Jack and her daughter grinding corn grains with two pestles and a mortar, Six Nations of the Grand River, 1912. Sometimes pestles/ corn pounders were made of American/ White Elm, while the mortars were often made of Oak wood. Photo credit: Frederick Wilkerson Waugh, Canadian Museum of History Archives and Collections
Slippery Elm leaves and twigs, showing leaf venation, texture, arrangement on the branch, Photo credit: D. Botcherby 2022

Slippery Elm

Description

Tehehanteh Miller, Six Nations knowledge-holder and linguistic and cultural advisory on this project, relayed that in the time of prophecy Great White Elm refers to the time when the Chiefs cannot hold it all together; the oral tradition teaches that heads of the chiefs will roll, and it's the responsibility of the people to hold the peace tree from falling down. He noted that many people believe we are in that time right now.

 

Slippery Elm is a long-lived tree that grows up to 65-70 feet tall, and can also grow very wide. The bark is a light grey-brown coloration on the flattened, straight ridges, with furrows in between that can be reddish-brown, and a reddish-brown heartwood. The inner bark becomes mucilaginous – slick and slippery – when mixed with water, which is the reason for this elm’s name. Twigs are hairy, and contain the mucilaginous qualities that quench thirst when chewed. Slippery elm prefers sun moist loam or clay loam soils, but can also tolerate drier, calcareous soils. It grows in deciduous to mixed-wood forests, along floodplains, stream banks, uplands, and lower slope to bottom wooded areas. Slippery elm also reproduces vegetatively by layering, sprouting from stumps and root crowns, and spreading by rhizomes. These trees are intermediately shade tolerant, and form part of the sub-canopy in mid-successional forests.

Conservation Status

Ontario and New York S5 (Secure); in Québec S3 (Vulnerable)

American Elm

Conservation Status

Ontario and New York S5 (Secure); in Québec S4 (Apparently Secure)