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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Alnus incana ssp. tenuifolia | Thinleaf Alder
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Alnus incana ssp. tenuifolia | Thinleaf Alder
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Thinleaf alder is a deciduous multistemmed shrub or small tree which tends to form thickets and may grow up to 40 feet (12 m) tall [2,42]. More typically, mature plants are 6 to 15 feet (2-5 m) tall, with 4 to 8 inch (10-20 cm) diameter trunks [45,53,55]. The bark is thin, smooth, and green-gray, grayish-brown, or reddish-brown [22,42,45]. The leaves are broadly elliptic or ovate-oblong, mostly 1 to 3 inches (3-7 cm) long, dull green on both sides, with doubly dentate margins [22,42]. Male and female flowers occur on the same plant in catkins. The drooping staminate catkins are clustered at the end of a twig, each about 1 to 4 inches (3-10 cm) long [22]. Clusters of three to nine pistillate catkins (which develop into cones) are on short stout stalks. Each catkin is about 0.4 to 0.6 inch (9-13 mm) long [22,42]. The cones remain on plants for about a year after seeds are shed, aiding in identification during winter. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (microphanerophyte) Burned or Clipped State: Hemicryptophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Thinleaf alder reproduces both sexually and vegetatively. Sexual Reproduction: Male and female flowers of thinleaf alder occur in catkins on the same plant. The female catkins are small, 0.4 to 0.6 inch (9-13 mm) long, semiwoody, conelike, and wind pollinated. The fruit is a small, single-seeded nutlet, with narrow lateral wings which aid in dispersal by wind and water [15,39,50]. Thinleaf alder produces abundant seed which is dispersed during fall and winter [15,59]. There are about 675,000 cleaned air-dried seeds per pound (1,488,000/kg) [50]. Annual seedfall observations in Alaska showed that 3,305 seeds/m sq were found in soil under thinleaf alder stands, but of these, only 745 were viable [59]. In fact, seed viability can be quite low; as many as 95 percent of thinleaf alder seeds have been found empty [15,50]. In Oregon and Washington, female cones are often disfigured with disease, but the effects on seed viability have not been reported [20]. Seeds require no treatment or prechilling to break dormancy and can be expected to germinate immediately after dispersal when conditions are favorable [15]. Seed of the closely related speckled alder has remained viable in storage for up to 10 years when stored in sealed containers at 34 to 38 degrees F (1-3 C) [50]. Germination and seedling establishment seems better on exposed mineral soils than on organic substances [59]. Vegetative Reproduction: Thinleaf alder often occurs in dense thickets, which reportedly result from underground rhizomes or suckers [6]. However thinleaf alder is a prolific seeder, and thickets could be produced by natural seeding alone [11]. More recent studies suggest that plants found in thickets are not clones [51]. However, sprouting of exposed thinleaf alder roots in streams has been noted, and submerged branches sometimes form adventitious roots [11,15]. If plants are damaged, sprouting can occur from the root collar or stump [15]. After top-removal by beavers, plants have been observed to sprout heavily from the cut [28]. Plants can also sprout from the root crown following fire [59]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Thinleaf alder seldom grows away from water and is typically confined to rivers, moist stream borders, overflow channels, or moist mountain springs or seeps and only occasionally occurs in broad floodplains [2,17,30]. Most sites are seasonally flooded, and water tables normally remain within 3 feet (1 m) of the ground surface [17,28,31]. Restricted to high water tables, thinleaf alder communities often form continuous narrow stringers immediately adjacent to perennial streams [28,58]. Thinleaf alder has a high flood tolerance and thus stabilizes streambanks. Quite shade tolerant, it is frequently found growing in the understory of coniferous forests on moist sites [2,15]. Soils: Thinleaf alder typically grows on poorly developed soils of cobbles, gravels, or sands [17,31]. Soils usually remain moist yearround due to high water tables. As stands develop along moving water, finer fluvial deposits are trapped, which eventually develop into surface soil textures of loams to sandy loams overlying coarser substrates [17,28,31]. Mountain springs and seeps in Oregon have surface soils 6 to 20 inches (15-50 cm) deep, composed of organic mucks or organic loams over a stony subsoil [31]. Soils under thinleaf alder are normally higher in available nitrogen than adjacent communities, since thinleaf alder can fix between 41 and 349 pounds/acre (43-360 kg/ha) of nitrogen annually [15]. Associates: Thinleaf alder is commonly found with shrubs such as re-dosier dogwood (Cornus serices), Hudson Bay currant (Ribes hudsonianum), prickly currant (R. lacustre), woods rose (Rosa woodsii), Douglas spirea (Spiraea douglasii), and common snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus). Common associated herbs include bullrush (Scirpus spp.), sedges (Carex spp.), bluejoint reedgrass (Calamagrostis canadensis), timothy (Phloem pratense), fowl bluegrass (Poa palustris), and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis) [17,28,31,58]. In the Great Basin, thinleaf alder is most commonly associated with water birch (Betula occidentalis) and willows (Salix spp.) [33]. Elevation: Thinleaf alder is typically a low to middle elevation species. Elevational ranges for the following western states are presented below [8,25,31,55]: from 5,000 to 10,000 feet (1,524-3,048 m) in CO 2,500 to 8,000 feet (762-2,438 m) in ID 2,500 to 8,000 feet (762-2,438 m) in MT 2,200 to 5,700 feet (671-1,737 m) in OR 4,500 to 8,000 feet (1,372-2,438 m) in the Sierra Nevada Mtns. 4,100 to 9,000 feet (1,250-2,745 m) in UT 6,200 to 9,000 feet (1,890-2,745 m) in WY SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Thinleaf alder is an early seral species [28,59]. Seasonal disturbances from flooding provide suitable seedbeds for establishment of new plants. Many thinleaf alder communities appear to be seral to cottonwood (Populus spp.) and willow (Salix spp.) [28,31]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Both staminate and pistillate catkins of thinleaf alder are produced during the gowing season prior to blooming and are exposed during the winter. Catkins then expand before the leaves emerge in the spring. Flowering generally begins during March and April in the northwestern United States [15]. Cones ripen in the fall, after which dispersal occurs. The empty cones remain on plants for about a year. Leaves remain green until they are dropped in the fall. The average dates of phenological events in Montana and Idaho are presented below [49]: East of Continental West of Continental Divide: Montana Divide: Montana & Idaho Leaf bud burst May 19 May 7 Leaves full green June 18 June 8 Flowering starts April 15 May 15 Flowering ends May 6 May 30 Fruit ripe August 3 August 24 Seed fall starts June 6 Sept 10 Leaves start to wither Sept 11 Sept 5 Leaves begin to fall Sept 22 Sept 20 Leaves fallen Oct 5 Oct 14 The flowering dates for several western states are presented below [8,15,39,42,49,50]: Flowering Begins Flowering Ends Location May ---- AK April August CO March July ID March August MT March ---- OR February ---- Great Basin March June WY

Related categories for Species: Alnus incana ssp. tenuifolia | Thinleaf Alder

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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