Taxus cuspidata ‘Capitata’ – Japanese yew – Yew –

Description

Taxus – Yew –

There are 5-10 broadly rounded to upright, dioecious or change sex over time, evergreen, coniferous, large shrubs or small trees, that are slow growing and long lived within the Taxaceae family, in this genus.  They are found naturally occurring in forest extending from North temperate areas to the Philippines and Central America.  Yews are grown for lanceolate, needle like dark green leaves with prominent olive green midribs, with paler undersides, these are arranged spirally but often appear 2 ranked..  Over the centuries they develop domed crowns and a massive thick trunk clothed in reddish brown or grayish brown bark   which peels off in thin scales.  On the female   plants, single seeded, egg to oblong shaped vivid red fruits are produced in fleshy berries called an aril and mature in 6-9 months.  Grow as specimen plants or use as hedges and topiary, the prostrate forms make a good ground cove, even in dense shade.  Most tolerate coastal exposure, dry soils, and urban pollution.  All parts (except the fleshy red seed coats) are highly toxic if ingested, it said to kill some livestock..  Birds are able to break down the toxins.

Grow in any well drained, fertile soil, including alkaline or chalky, acidic soils, in sun or deep shade.  Trim hedges in summer and early fall.

Prone to black vine weevil, mealybugs, mites, scale insects, phtyophtora dieback, root rot, needle blights and some lepidopteran insects.

T. cuspidata ‘Capitata’ – Japanese yew – One of the faster growing Yews it reaches 40′ feet tall and 20-25′ feet wide and its found naturally occurring in Northeastern China and Japan. It has grayish brown bark.It forms a pyramidal shrub or small tree with linear, spiny tipped, dark green leaves, up to 1″ long, arranged in a “V” shape, tawny or yellow green beneath, turning red-green over winter, and narrowly parted either side of the shoots. Scarlet arils are up to 11/2″ across. Tolerant of dry and shady conditions.

zone 5-7