In terms of invasiveness, Amur maple is different from trees that are unambiguously invasive and should be removed right away, such as tree of heaven. While it is no longer recommended to plant Amur maple due to its potential invasiveness. if you have the tree growing in your yard, the need for removing it depends on whether it poses a risk to the surrounding environment. It is generally a short lived tree that rarely lives to maturity, as it is susceptible to rot and storm damage.

What Does Amur Maple Look Like

Amur maple can be either a small tree or a multi-stemmed shrub whose canopy is typically as wide as the tree is tall. The tree tends to leaf out early in the spring. The leaves are opposite with toothed edges. They have three lobes, and a typical feature of Amur maple is that the middle lobe is much longer than the side lobes. During the summer, the leaves are dark green. In the fall they turn yellow, red, or orange depending on the cultivar. In mid spring, creamy white long flower panicles appear on the tree. Unlike those of most other maples, Amur maple flowers are fragrant. Over the summer, they develop into the winged samaras that are typical for maples. Amur maple samaras are small, about ¾ to 1 inch long, pink or reddish in the summer and turning brown when ripening.

How to Get Rid of Amur Maple

If your Amur maple is within 300 feet of a habitat that the tree could invade, find out whether it has already spread beyond control in other back yards, open lands, along rights of way, etc. If that is the case and Amur maple is already a problem where you live, it would be best removing the tree and applying a wide-spectrum herbicide such as glyphosate on the cut stump to prevent it from growing back. If Amur maple is not (yet) problematic in your area, keep monitoring your yard for any seedlings that emerge and hand-pull them with all their roots. This is best done after a rain when the soil is wet. If the sapling is too big already and you cannot remove it by hand, dig it out to remove all of the roots, or use the cut stump herbicide treatment method. If you are dealing with numerous small seedlings around a mature tree, you can also mow them but you need to repeat this often. In any event, even if Amur maple is not considered invasive in your area, keep an eye out for any seedlings and remove them promptly.