Alnus glutinosa ‘ Black Alder ‘ Common Alder ‘ Alder

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Description

Alnus –Alder There are about 35 species, occurring in cold to cool temperature regions in the Northern Hemisphere in this genus.  They are deciduous, semi evergreen-to-evergreen trees, which are fast growing and can be short, lived.  They’re unique for carrying microorganisms in their roots that can turn air into nitrogen to fix depleted soils.  They bear alternate leafs larger and thicker then the Birch’s which they are closely related, with smooth and wavy to jaggedly toothed edges.  Flowers are tiny but arranged in catkin (dense cluster of scale like flowers as of a Birch), male catkins are long and thin hanging in profuse bunches at the ends of branches, female catkins are short and barrel-shaped in less conspicuous groups.  The bark is brown or blackish and sometimes wrinkled.  Used as a shade tree or nurse tree or a windbreaker.  They have little fall colors. Sun loving trees that likes moist soils such as bottom of the valleys or were soil is too waterlog or that are very infertile or polluted. Should be pruned early to a single truck and trim branches above head height. Prone to Phytophtora root rot and mealybugs. Alnus glutinosa – Black Alder – Common Alder – Native to Europe, Siberia, and North Africa.  This fast growing deciduous tree grows 60’ feet tall but in cultivation grows 30’ feet tall.  It forms an open broadly conical canopy on dark brown bark becomes wrinkled and checkered.  It bears dark green rounded 4” long leaves that are shallowly toothed and with paler undersides.  The veins are white with tufts of hair in the veins axils.  Male catkins are in pendent clusters of 3-5 appear in late winter to early spring and are dull purple changing to dark yellow.  Female catkins are in erect, and held in clusters changing from purple through burgundy to green to finally brown. Zones 3-8

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