Biotope Quarterly

The Advantest biotope serves as a habitat for various organisms.
This newsletter introduces the various animals and plants that live in our biotope along with videos and photos.

Advantest biotope

Advantest biotope

 

Winter in the biotope - Trees that lose their leaves (2024. 2. 22)

Deciduous trees, whose leaves turn beautiful shades of red and yellow in autumn, completely lose their leaves in winter, revealing their trunks and branches.
Just as people look different from each other in many ways, so do trees. Here are some deciduous trees with distinctive barks that can be seen in the biotope in winter.

Leafless Deciduous Trees

Trident maple tree

Trident maple tree

Bark of trident maple tree

This is a tall tree, standing 10-20 meters high.
The bark is grayish-brown and smooth on young trees. However, it peels off in large vertical strips as the tree grows.
This tree is said to be resistant to air pollution and is often planted as a roadside tree.

Sawtooth oak tree

Sawtooth oak tree

Bark of sawtooth oak tree

This is a tall tree, reaching a height of about 15 meters.
The bark is dark and rugged, with irregular vertical cracks.
The wood from this tree is relatively slow-burning, and has traditionally been used for firewood and charcoal.
Insects such as beetles are attracted to the sap that seeps from the trunk of the tree.

Crape myrtle tree

Crape myrtle tree

Bark of crape myrtle tree

The Japanese name for this tree is "Saru-Suberi (meaning "monkeys slip"), which derives from the fact that the trunk is so smooth and slippery that even monkeys may have difficulty climbing it.
The bark is reddish-brown and very smooth, and the trunk and branches grow in a sinuous pattern from side to side. Some crape myrtles can reach up to 10 meters in height.

Winged spindle tree

This is a shrub that grows 1-3 meters tall.
The bark is grayish-brown with a shallow striped pattern, and the branches have thin, rectangular wings.
This tree is called "Nishiki" tree in Japanese. "Nishiki" means "Japanese brocade", and refers to the vibrant red autumnal leaves.
In contrast, the bare branches in winter make the "wings" of the tree conspicuous.

Winged spindle tree

Bark and branches of
winged spindle tree

Branches of winged spindle tree.
They have flat, rectangular wings.

Japanese maple tree

Mature Japanese maple tree

Young Japanese maple tree

Bark of mature
Japanese maple tree

Bark of young
Japanese maple tree

The maple tree, which displays beautiful autumn foliage in the fall, completely loses its leaves in winter and looks like this. The bark of young maple trees is green and smooth, while the bark of mature trees turns light grayish-brown and has shallow vertical cracks. Most maple trees grow in semi-shaded areas and reach a height of 5 to 10 meters.

The videos of the Advantest biotope can be viewed via the "Biotope Quarterly Archive" below.

Biotope Quarterly Archive