White ash is one of the most used trees for everyday purposes and, to keep up with high demand, is cultivated almost everywhere possible. The wood is white and quite dense (within 20% of 670 kg/m3), strong, and straight-grained. Its species produces an ideal, atypical dominant excurrent structured crown. It is a traditional timber of choice for production of
baseball bats and tool handles. The wood is also favorable for furniture and
flooring. A study compared it to eight other different species, and it showed the highest antibacterial activity in the context of manufacturing chopping boards. Woodworkers use the timber mainly for interior uses due to high perishability in contact with ground soil. It makes a serviceable
longbow if properly worked. The wood was used in ceiling fan blades from the 1970s through the mid-1980s, though cane was sometimes simulated with plastic then. It is no longer used for ceiling fan blades in most countries. White ash is not seen in cultivation as often as
green ash, due to its preference for undisturbed forest sites away from urban pollution and soil compaction. It sometimes has been planted for its consistently reliable autumn colors, which typically are bright orange and red hues as opposed to other species of ash that produce a uniform yellow color. Cultivation of white ash differs across North American continent. For example, within the City of
Chicago region, 2010 statistics show most common street tree species is white ash at 6.2%. Along with third ranked green type at 4.9%, ashes combine to make up 11% percent of the city's street trees, with an overall population of 13,648,044 million standing ashes within
Cook County alone. The
cultivar 'Autumn Purple', also called 'Junginger' for Karl Junginger of McKay Nursery, was introduced to the plant trade in 1956. Though Junginger is credited for the discovery of the seedless cultivar with its strong reddish-purple autumn color, It quickly became the most popular and most expensive landscaping selection, surpassing the high priced
ginkgo,
London plane and
white/burr oak. A related species, Biltmore ash, is sometimes treated as a variety of white ash. Other taxonomists argue that Biltmore ash is its own species (
Fraxinus biltmoreana). North American native ash tree species are used by
North American frogs as a critical food source, as leaves that fall from the trees are particularly suitable for
tadpoles to feed upon in ponds (both temporary and permanent), large puddles, and other water sources. Species such as
red maple, which are taking the place of ash due to the
ash borer, are much less suitable for the frogs as a food source—resulting in poor frog survival rates and small frog sizes. == References ==