A large number of species and
cultivars are grown in Australia. The commercial availability and popularity of the various varieties has changed over time. "Deliberate planting of selected clones", wrote
Spencer (1995) "combined with chance hybridisation, has resulted in a mix of elms rather different from that in England".
English elm English elm (
Ulmus procera) was a popular tree for park and avenue planting in the nineteenth century. One of the oldest known exotic trees in Victoria is the sole survivor of four planted in the newly established
Royal Botanic Gardens in 1846. File:Tulliallan Elm Trees2.jpg|An avenue of heritage-listed English elm at
Tulliallan, Melbourne, Victoria File:Elm trees on Royal Parade, Parkville, Melbourne.jpg|English elm on Royal Parade, Parkville, Melbourne File:Cootamundra Adams Street.JPG|English elm,
Cootamundra, one trimmed for power line File:Myrniong Main Street.JPG|English elm in early autumn,
Myrniong File:Goulburn Belmore Park 002.JPG|English elm in autumn, Belmore Park,
Goulburn Dutch elm Cultivars of the
hybrid Dutch elm (
Ulmus x hollandica) are among the most commonly seen elms in Australia. They include
'Major',
'Vegeta',
'Dauvessei',
'Dovaei,
'Wredei',
'Canadian Giant' / Canadian elm, and
'Purpurascens'. 'Major' was distributed in
Victoria from the 1850s and 'Vegeta' from the 1860s.
'Cicestria' was marketed in Australia in the early 20th century by the former Gembrook or Nobelius Nursery. Some hybrid elms of this group introduced to Australia from England are "commonly and erroneously referred to [in Australia] as 'English elm' ". Similarly, an old tree labelled
U. procera in
Dunedin Botanic Garden, New Zealand (2023), may be an elm from England, but it is not the English elm clone. File:Ulmus montana, With., var. 'Canadian Giant,' State Nursery, Campbelltown.jpg|
'Canadian Giant', State Nursery, Campbelltown, New South Wales File:Digby Soldiers Avenue.JPG|Canadian elm ( = 'Canadian Giant'), Avenue of Honour, Digby, Victoria (2015), grown back after pruning File:BacchusMarshAvenueofHonour1 (cropped).JPG|'Canadian Giant' (right),
'Vegeta' (left), Avenue of Honour, Bacchus Marsh, Victoria (2008) File:Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour.jpg|'Canadian Giant' fruiting, September, Bacchus Marsh Avenue of Honour File:Healesville Hotel.JPG|'Vegeta' in
Healesville, Victoria File:Ulmus montana, With., L. var. purpurea. State Nursery, Campbelltown.jpg|
'Purpurascens', State Nursery, Campbelltown, New South Wales
Chinese elm Chinese elm (
Ulmus parvifolia) became commercially available in Australia in the late 1850s and regained popularity in the 1980s. In recent years a number of Chinese elm cultivars have been introduced into cultivation including the American bred variety
'Emer I', the Japanese introductions
'Frosty' and
'Nire-keyaki', and a number of Australian selections including
'Burnley Select',
'Churchyard',
'Todd' and
'Yarralumla'. File:Ulmus parviflora (sic), Jacq. (U. chinesis, Pers.). State Nursery, Campbelltown.jpg|
Ulmus parvifolia, State Nursery,
Campbelltown, New South Wales File:Two Chinese Elms at the trail entrance of the Narrandera Wetlands.jpg|Two Chinese elms at the trail entrance of the
Narrandera Wetlands, NSW, planted in 1995 File:Ulmus parvifolia in Golden Valley Tree Park, May 2022 02.jpg|
Ulmus parvifolia, Golden Valley Tree Park, Western Australia, planted in 1982 (May 2022)
Wych elm or Scots elm Wych elm or Scots elm (
Ulmus glabra Huds.) was introduced to Australia in 1860. A number of related cultivars were planted as "rarities" in the
Victorian era including the
weeping wych elm 'Horizontalis' (from 1865 (
Ulmus minor var.
suberosa (Moench), Rehder, =
Ulmus minor Mill.), pendulous field elm (
Ulmus minor 'Pendula'), as well as
Ulmus minor 'Viminalis' and its related cultivars
'Viminalis Aurea',
'Viminalis Marginata'. A fastigiate form of smooth-leaved elm was selected by the
City of Melbourne for street planting, but was later found to have a problem with spitting at "V" crotches. File:Ulmus campestris, L. var. umbraculifera, Trautv. State Nursery, Campbelltown.jpg|
Ulmus minor 'Umbraculifera', State Nursery, Campbelltown, NSW File:Yass Riverside Park Tree.JPG|
Field elm in Riverside Park,
Yass, New South Wales Image:Ulmus minor Variegata.jpg|
Silver elm in
Benalla Botanic Gardens. Image:Ulmus x viminalis.jpg|Two pollarded
Ulmus minor 'Viminalis' in Benalla Botanic Gardens File:Ulmus x viminalis (1123 Lydiard Street) (3).jpg|Foliage of 'Viminalis' saplings cloned from the tree in Lydiard St,
Ballarat, Victoria File:Ulmus carpinifolia in Golden Valley Tree Park, May 2022 01.jpg|
Ulmus carpinifolia in Golden Valley Tree Park, Western Australia, planted in 1994 (May 2022)
American elm American elm (
Ulmus americana) was recorded in nineteenth century plant catalogues, but the only known currently living specimens were obtained from the Yarralumla Nursery in
Canberra in 1985. File:Winter scene of ulmus americana (Canberra, 2016).jpg|
Ulmus americana avenue, Grant Crescent,
Griffith, Australian Capital Territory Other species and cultivars A number of other species and cultivars have been introduced including
Ulmus davidiana,
U. glaucescens var. lasiocarpa,
European white elm (
Ulmus laevis),
Mexican elm (
U. mexicana),
U. propinqua,
Siberian elm (
U. pumila),
Himalayan elm (
Ulmus wallichiana), and
U. 'Jacqueline Hillier'. The cultivars
'Dovaei' and
'Louis van Houtte' were introduced to Australia but are rarely seen in cultivation. The hybrid cultivars
'Dodoens',
'Groeneveld',
'Lobel',
'Plantyn',
'Urban' and
'Sapporo Autumn Gold' were all imported into Australia from
The Netherlands via
New Zealand in 1986. File:Ulmus pumila leaves.jpg|Foliage of Siberian elm in Alma Park, St Kilda, Victoria ==Cultivation==