Catalpa speciosa is a medium-sized,
deciduous tree growing to tall and wide. It has a trunk up to in diameter, with brown to gray flaky
bark. The
leaves are deciduous, opposite (or whorled), large, heart shaped, long and broad, pointed at the tip and softly hairy beneath. The leaves generally do not color in autumn before falling; instead, they either fall abruptly after the first hard freeze, or turn a slightly yellow-brown before dropping off. The catalpa tree is the last tree to grow leaves in the spring. The winter twigs of northern catalpa are like those of few other trees, having sunken leaf scars that resemble suction cups. Their whorled arrangement (three scars per node) around the twigs is another diagnostic. The
flowers are across, trumpet shaped, white with yellow stripes and purple spots inside; they grow in
panicles of 10–30. The
fruit is a long, thin
legume-like capsule, long and in diameter; it turns brown in the fall and often stays attached to tree during winter (and can be mistaken for brown
icicles). The pod contains numerous flat, light brown seeds with two papery wings. The northern catalpa is closely related to
southern catalpa, and can be distinguished by the flowering panicles, which bear a smaller number of larger flowers, and the slightly broader seed pods. It is distributed in Taiwan, the United States and Chinese Mainland in Guangdong, Shanxi, Henan, Hebei, Zhejiang, Yunnan, Guangxi, Shandong, Jiangsu, Xinjiang, Fujian, Shaanxi and other places, and has been artificially introduced and cultivated. ==Distribution==