List of botanical gardens and arboretums in Arkansas

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This list of botanical gardens and arboretums in Arkansas is intended to include all significant botanical gardens and arboretums in the U.S. state of Arkansas [1] [2] [3]

NameImageAffiliationCity
Arkansas Arboretum Pinnacle Mountain State Park Little Rock
Blue Spring Heritage Center Blue Springs Heritage Center.JPG Eureka Springs
Botanical Garden of the Ozarks Fayetteville
Garvan Woodland Gardens Lake Hamilton.jpg University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture Hot Springs
South Arkansas Arboretum South Arkansas Community College El Dorado

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The South Arkansas Arboretum is an arboretum and botanical garden owned by the local school system but operated as Arkansas's 50th state park by the South Arkansas Community College. It is located next to the former El Dorado High School in El Dorado, Arkansas, USA and open daily except for holidays.

<i>Ulmus crassifolia</i> Species of tree

Ulmus crassifoliaNutt., the Texas cedar elm or simply cedar elm, is a deciduous tree native to south central North America, mainly in southern and eastern Texas, southern Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana, with small populations in western Mississippi, southwest Tennessee and north central Florida; it also occurs in northeastern Mexico. It is the most common elm tree in Texas. The tree typically grows well in flat valley bottom areas referred to as 'Cedar Elm Flats'. The common name 'cedar elm' is derived from the trees' association with juniper trees, locally known as cedars.

<i>Ulmus serotina</i> Species of tree

Ulmus serotinaSarg., the September elm, is an autumn-flowering North American species of tree. It is uncommon beyond Tennessee; only very locally distributed through Illinois, Kentucky, Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Alabama and Georgia, and disjunct into Nuevo León, Mexico. It grows predominantly on limestone bluffs and along streams to elevations of 400 m.

The possible elm cultivar Ulmus 'Jalaica' hails from the Baltic states. Living specimens are grown in the arboretum at the National Botanic Garden of Latvia, Salaspils, introduced in 1998 from the Tallinn Botanic Garden and the plantarium OPU Tallinn, Estonia. It was assumed the word 'Jalaica' was the name given the cultivar, but it has since emerged that the word simply means 'Elm' in Estonian, and the trees donated may not in fact be cultivars, although of rather unusual appearance.

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