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Bigleaf magnolia

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The Bigleaf Magnolia (Magnolia macrophylla) is a deciduous magnolia native to the southeastern United States and eastern Mexico. It is medium-sized understory tree 15-20 m tall, distinguished from other magnolias by the large leaf size, 25-80 cm long and 11-30 cm broad. Many of the tree's branches bend under the weight of the large foliage. This species boasts the largest simple leaf and single flower of any native plant in North America. Bigleaf Magnolia is very rare and widely scattered in the wild; few people have seen it except in cultivation. This tree is found in rich mesic woods; any disturbance that lets more light reach the ground is beneficial to the establishment Bigleaf magnolia, but despite its relatively fast growth-rate when stimulated by more light, other understory and canopy trees/seedlings are usually able to outgrow and out-compete it. This suits the plant just fine as it is tolerant of low light levels; it does not need full sun to survive once established (however, it does not like full shade). Natural regeneration is quite limited due to the scarcity of mature, seed-bearing plants and the fact that this tree's population mostly consists of widely scatterd individuals. In addition, this species is plagued by poor seed set (most likely from limiting factors mentioned above) and low seed viability, a trait shared by its cousin and frequent associate in the wild, Fraser magnolia.

Plant collection, both legal and illegal, may have an adverse inpact on this tree's population due to low population density, and high collection pressere can likely cause this species to locally disappear.

There are three subspecies; the latter two have been treated as separate species by some botanists:

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