Falling Water Bald Cypress
Taxodium distichum
Overview
The large Falling Water Bald-Cypress Tree can grow to heights of 70 feet at moderate pace, enjoying the light of full sun. Most cone bearing trees keep their needles throughout the winter, but not this bal-cypress, as it loses them and grows them back in the spring time. They turn a bright red in the fall and grow back to a light to medium green in the spring.
Cultivation
The Falling Water Bald-Cypress is usually found next to roadways or in parks, places where it has room to grow. A wonderful thing about this tree is its adaptability, as it does not matter what type of soil it is planted in, wet, dry, or swampy. It would rather be planted in acidic soil, because slight yellowing may occur in alkali soils. The bark on this tree also gives off a reddish-gray color, similar to the cones it bears into the winter.
Biodiversity Sustained
The Bald-Cypress can be home to birds, small mammals, and water birds, but is rather susceptible to twig blight, spider mite, gall forming mite, and cypress moths.
On Xavier's Campus, over the Next Decade, this Tree will:
Stormwater Runoff Intercepted: Gallons
CO2 Reduction: lbs
Electricity Savings: kilowatt/hours
Environmental Benefits (in US dollars): $