  |
Fremd
Eastern Hemlock - Tsuga canadensis 'Fremdii'
Pinaceae – Pine family.
Fremd
Eastern hemlock is a native, evergreen conifer with upswept branches.
It is a smaller variety of hemlock, which
commonly reach 60 to 70 feet (18-21 m) tall and 24 to 48 inches
(61-122 cm) in d.b.h. One of the largest eastern hemlock
recorded was 175 feet (53 m) tall and 76 inches (193 cm) in
d.b.h. Can live longer than 800 years.
(3)
Hardy to USDA Zone 3.
|
|
|
This Fremd Eastern Hemlock at the Morton Arboretum is 72 years
old. |
|
Eastern hemlock is very shade tolerant. Seedlings
survive in as little as 5 percent of full light.
Individuals are able to survive several hundred
years of suppression, and many show numerous growth
releases and suppressions. Saplings less than 2
inches (5 cm) in d.b.h. may be more than 100 years
old. Seedlings are able to establish under the
canopy of mature individuals. Eastern hemlock
establishes under dense sugar maple canopies and can
replace that species. Eastern hemlock uniquely
modifies semi permanent soil properties, such as
acidity, which favors its reproduction.
Opportunities to establish in a mature forest
increase over time as nurse logs and tip-up mounds
accumulate.
Eastern hemlock is very susceptible to fire because
of its thin bark, shallow roots, low-branching
habit, and heavy litter deposits. It is possibly the
most fire-sensitive mesophytic tree species in its
range. However, Eastern hemlock usually escapes fire
because it occurs in moist habitats and is often
associated with hardwoods which do not readily burn.
If a fire starts in a cutover area, a windfall area,
or an area with dead standing timber, it may carry
into a northern hardwoods forest if there is strong
wind. In Michigan, the average return time for
severe crown fires in the hemlock-white ine-northern
hardwoods type is estimated to be about 1,400 years
[63]. In northeastern Maine, the average return
interval for fire in spruce-fir forests in which
eastern hemlock is a minor component is about 800
years.
(3)
|

The evergreen, medium- to dark-green needles are about 0.5"
long, subtlely petioled, and in a spiraled or pectinate
(two-ranked) arrangement on the slender stems, with two
bluish-white bands underneath each needle.
|
Eastern Hemlock is also
commonly called Canada Hemlock and
Hemlock Spruce. In the United States,
eastern hemlock occurs throughout New England,
the mid-Atlantic states, and the Lake States,
and extends south in the Appalachian Mountains
to northern Georgia and Alabama and west from
the mountains into Indiana, western Ohio, and
western Kentucky. At its northern limit, eastern
hemlock ranges along the southern border of
Canada from southern Ontario to Cape Breton
Island, Nova Scotia.
Eastern hemlock occurs as a dominant or
codominant in coniferous and mixed-hardwood
forests. It is often the only conifer present in
mixed mesophytic forests of the eastern United
States. Eastern hemlock wood is of low value
because of brittleness and abundant knots. It is
used for pulp, light framing, sheathing,
roofing, subflooring, and boxes and crates.
Dense stands of eastern hemlock provide
excellent wildlife habitat. Cove forests in the
southern Appalachian Mountains provide nesting
habitat for many species of birds. The
black-throated blue warbler, black-throated
green warbler, and blackburnian warbler are
especially abundant in virgin eastern hemlock
cove forests. Large eastern hemlocks can be
climbed by small black bear cubs. In
northeastern Minnesota, black bear mothers and
cubs spent more than 95 percent of the time in
April and May within 600 feet (183 m) of either
an eastern hemlock or an eastern white pine
(Pinus strobus) larger than 20 inches (51 cm) in
d.b.h. Eastern hemlock has high cavity value for
wildlife. Large hollow trees are commonly used
as dens by black bears. The seeds are eaten by
birds and mammals, and in the winter the foliage
is browsed by white-tailed deer, moose, and
snowshoe hares.
In the winter, eastern hemlock browse is
moderately preferred by moose and highly
preferred by white-tailed deer. In the summer,
white-tailed deer prefer hardwood sprouts and
seedlings to eastern hemlock. The seeds of
eastern hemlock are not as preferred by
white-footed mice, red-backed voles, and meadow
voles as red pine (Pinus resinosa) and white
pine seeds.
(3) |
|
|
|
- Native:
- NORTHERN AMERICA
Eastern Canada: Canada
- New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario
[s.e.],
Prince Edward Island, Quebec
[s.]
Northeastern U.S.A.: United
States -
Connecticut, Indiana
[s.],
Maine,
Massachusetts, Michigan,
New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island,
Vermont, West Virginia
North-Central U.S.A.:
United States - Minnesota
[e.],
Wisconsin
Southeastern U.S.A.: United
States - Alabama [n.],
Delaware,
Georgia [n.],
Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina,
South Carolina,
Tennessee, Virginia
|
Synonyms:
(1) |
|
| |
|

Fremd Eastern Hemlock Bark. Photo: Bruce Marlin |
|
Variants
- Tsuga canadensis 'Beehive' - a dwarf
shrub to 3' tall and 5' wide, with the general
shape of a spreading beehive
- Tsuga canadensis 'Bennett' - another
dwarf shrub to 3' tall and 5' wide, with
ascending then arching upper branchlets,
preferring partial shade
- Tsuga canadensis 'Cole's Prostrate' -
a groundcover form and bonsai titleernative in
partial shade to the prostrate Junipers, slowly
to 1' tall by 4' in diameter, with the central
stems becoming exposed over time
- Tsuga canadensis 'Gentsch White' - a
dwarf shrub form (to 4' tall by 4' wide if never
pruned, but half that size when sheared), with
Spring tip growth that becomes intensely
creamy-white in Autumn and Winter against the
dark green background of the older foliage; must
be placed in partial shade to avoid sunscorch;
feather shearing is recommended to promote
compactness and encourage more tip growth
- Tsuga canadensis 'Jeddeloh' - a dwarf
shrub form to 3' tall by 5' wide, with a subtle
depression in the center, and an titleernative to
Bird's Nest Spruce (Picea abies
'Nidiformis')
- Tsuga canadensis 'Pendula' - an
upright weeping form, often staked during
nursery production to maintain a central leader
to the desired height, often anywhere from 2' to
5' tall, by about 5' wide
- Tsuga canadensis 'Sargentii' - a
wide-spreading and weeping large shrub form, to
10' tall by 20' wide, with many pendulous
branches, effectively used near bodies of water
(where it resembles a "green ghost"), in large
rock gardens, or on embankments
|
|

Eastern Hemlock Cones
References
1.
USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program.
Germplasm Resources Information Network - (GRIN)
2.
Ohio State University Pocket Gardener Eastern
Hemlock
3.
USDA Fire Effects Information
Eastern Hemlock |
|
|
|