Yellow-Cedar - Sierra Club BC
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Yellow-Cedar 

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Yellow-Cedar 

Chamaecyparis nootkatensis 

APPEARANCE 

Also known as Nootka cypress, Nootka cedar, yellow cypress, Alaska cypress, Alaska cedar, and Alaska yellow cedar, this is not a true cedar (this is why a hyphen is used). The yellow-cedar grows to be 24 metres tall, with a large grooved trunk that spreads at the base. Its needles are scaly and hang on small droopy branches. The wood has a distinctive smell and is resistant to decay. Its leaves are prickly and they can be dark green to yellowy-green. 

RANGE & HABITAT 

The yellow-cedar is found west of the Coast Mountains and on islands on the northern Pacific coast. In B.C., the yellow-cedar grows in the Coast and Mountains and Georgia Depression ecoprovinces. 

RECIPROCAL RELATIONSHIPS 

Yellow-cedar can live for hundreds of years! Young cedars will sprout out of damp rich earth and out of old, downed trees. Their wood is rot-resistant and an extremely important wood for boat building. During the winter, bears can den in the hollowed-out trunks of old cedar trees. Many birds will build their nests in these trees, and some small mammals will also seek out cover underneath cedar saplings.  

Coast Salish people highly valued cedar bark for its’ anti-inflammatory properties which was often used to treat wounds. Despite the ecological importance of this plant, its population has been in a steady decline since the 1980s due to clearcut logging.

STATUS 

COSEWIC: Not Reported 
CDC: Yellow 

MORE INFORMATION 

If you belong to a First Nation with a story or piece of information not represented here and you would like to share more about this species, please email us at education@sierraclub.bc.ca.   

photo credit

Canva

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