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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Paper birch is a medium-sized, single- or multiple-stemmed, deciduous tree. In forests it typically has a slender trunk with a narrow crown, but in openings it has a wider crown spreading out from near the base [24]. Multiple-stemmed trees are relatively common as a result of browsing by moose and snowhoe hares [21]. Throughout much of its range, mature trees are 70 to 80 feet (21-24 m) tall and 10 to 12 inches (25-30 cm) in trunk diameter, but sometimes grow up to 30 inches (75 cm) in diameter [31,57]. In Alaska, paper birch trees are commonly 20 to 60 feet (6-18 m) high and 4 to 12 inches (10-30 cm) in trunk diameter [66]. Paper birch is short-lived. Height growth ceases at about 60 to 70 years of age; few trees live more than 140 years [24]. Paper birch is shallow-rooted with few roots found deeper than 24 inches (60 cm) below the soil surface [57]. The bark is reddish-brown on saplings. On mature trees bark is thin, white, and smooth, often separating into papery strips, and is easily peeled off in sheets [24,66]. Male and female flowers occur in separate, pendulous catkins on the same tree [24]. Fruits are winged-nutlets 0.06 inch (1.5 mm) long by 0.03 inch (0.8 mm) wide [57]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (mesophanerophyte) Burned or Clipped State: Chamaephyte Burned or Clipped State: Hemicryptophyte Burned or Clipped State: Therophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Seed production: Paper birch is a prolific seed producer. Seed production begins at about age 15, with optimum production at 40 to 70 years of age [11]. Trees produce good seed crops about every other year. Seed production over a 3-year period in Maine ranged from 2.4 to 9.8 million seeds/acre (5.9-24.2/ha) in a paper birch stand with 149 seed trees per acre (368/ha) [8]. In undisturbed paper birch stands in Alaska, seed production varied between 2.2 and 294 million seeds/acre (5.4-728 million/ha) [72]. Dispersal: The small, double-winged seeds are dispersed primarily by wind. Most seeds fall 100 to 200 feet (30-61 m) from the parent tree [43]. Seedfall at a clearcut edge was 60 percent of that within the uncut stand, and at 328 feet (100 m) into the cut seedfall was 10 percent of that within the stand [57]. Seed may travel great distances when blown across crusted snow [57]. Nearly all the seed (about 90 to 95 percent) is shed from September through November [51,57]. Seed quality and dormancy: Discolored and empty seeds make up 14 to 47 percent of a crop [57]. Seed viability is highest during heavy seed crop years and lowest during light seed crop years. In Maine, germination was 77 percent during a heavy seed year, but only 13 and 24 percent during 2 normal years [42]. Seeds dispersed early have lower germination rates than those dispersed lateer [8]. A small percentage of the seeds can remain viable on the forest floor for several years [51]. Germination and seedling establishment: Germination normally takes place in the spring following dispersal. Germination is generally best on disturbed mineral or mixed mineral-organic soil seedbeds [24,57]. The small seeds are sensitive to soil moisture and temperature. Thus shade usually favors germination and initial establishment by preventing seedbeds from drying out and reaching excessively high temperatures [43]. South or southwest aspects, excessively drained soils, insufficient rainfall, competing vegetation, and unshaded and undisturbed seedbeds deter establishment [51]. Seedlings will not grow on soils with a pH less than 5.0 [51]. Although germination and early survival are often best on mineral soils, seedling growth is best on humus seedbeds in moderate or full sunlight [42]. First year seedlings are about 2 to 5 inches (5-12 cm) tall [51]. Vegetative reproduction: Paper birch sprouts following cutting or fire. Sprouts typically arise from the stump base or root collar [74]. Prolific sprouting is common in young trees, with some individuals producing up to 100 sprouts [74]. Sprout growth is rapid, sometimes up to 24 inches (60 cm) in the first growing season [24]. Sprouting vigor decreases with age. Forty to fifty percent of 100- to 125-year-old trees produced stump sprouts within 1 year after cutting, while 80 to 90 percent of 40- to 50-year-old trees produced sprouts [74]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Paper birch grows in climates ranging from boreal to humid and tolerates wide variations in the amount and pattern of precipitation [24]. It grows at the northern limit of tree growth in arctic Canada and Alaska, in boreal spruce woodlands and forests, in montane and subalpine forests of the West, in wooded draws of the northern Great Plains, and in coniferous, deciduous, and, mixed forests of the Northeast and Lake States [18]. It is shade-intolerant, and abundant on burned-over and cut-over lands where it often forms pure stands [31]. It is restricted to openings in older forests. Paper birch is most abundant on rolling upland terrain and alluvial sites but grows on almost any soil and topographic situation, including rugged mountain slopes, open slopes, rock slides, muskegs, and borders of bogs and swamps [21,24,57]. In interior Alaska, paper birch tends to dominate cool, moist, north and east aspects, while aspen dominates warmer and drier, south and west aspects [57]. In the mountains of New England and New York, paper birch is one of the few hardwoods found near timberline [76]. In North Dakota, it is mostly restricted to moist draws on north-facing slopes [9]. Soils: Paper birch grows best on deep, well-drained to moderately well-drained, sandy or silty Spodosols, Inceptisols, and Entisols common on glacial deposits [24,57]. It grows on a wide range of soil textures from gravels to silts, and grows on organic bog and peat soils [24]. Associated trees: In addition to those species listed under Habitat Types and Plant Communities, common associates include bigtooth aspen (Populus grandidentata), pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica), yellow birch, gray birch (Betula populifolia), sugar maple (Acer saccharum), red maple (A. rubrum), and white ash (Fraxinus americana) in the southern and eastern part of its range, and red spruce (Picea rubens) and jack pine in boreal regions [76]. Understory: Conifer seedlings and saplings are typical under mature paper birch stands. Associated shrubs include American green alder (Alnus crispa), beaked hazel (Corylus cornuta), raspberries and blackberries (Rubus spp.), common bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi), blueberries (Vaccinium spp.), Bebb willow (Salix bebbiana), Scouler willow (S. scouleriana), highbush cranberry (Viburnum edule), Labrador-tea (Ledum groenlandicum), elder (Sambucus spp.), gooseberry (Ribes spp.), and dwarf bush-honeysuckle (Diervilla lonicera) [20,57,66]. In Alaska, Canada reedgrass (Calamagrostis canadensis) is prominent in paper birch stands, but other grasslike plants, sedges (Carex spp.), and lichens are principally absent [39]. In Labrador, lush herbs create a nearly continuous ground layer under paper birch stands [20]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Paper birch is a short-lived, shade-intolerant, pioneer species. It rapidly colonizes open disturbed sites created by wildfire, windthrow, or avalanche but lasts only one generation before it is replaced by shade-tolerant conifers or northern hardwoods. Paper birch seeds-in aggressively after wildfire, often forming large, essentially pure stands [19,21,39]. Depending on the recovery of other species following fire, paper birch may also occur in mixed postfire stands with spruces, aspen, and other hardwoods [15,27,39]. Seral paper birch stands resulting from wildfire in Alaska commonly have 3,000 to 6,000 trees per acre (7,470-14,820/ha) 20 years after establishment [39]. By 60 to 90 years, stands have thinned to 500 to 800 trees per acre (1,235-1,976/ha) [19,39]. Seedbeds under these paper birch stand are unfavorable for germination of birch seed, but spruce seedlings are common. By 120 to 150 years after fire, black or white spruce dominate [39,66]. In southeastern Labrador, paper birch seedling establishment begins promptly after fire and is restricted to the first 15 postfire years. At 40 to 50 years after fire conifer seedlings appear in the paper birch understory. At 75 to 100 years, paper birch stands begin to deteriorate and are eventually replaced by conifers unless another fire initiates paper birch establishment [21]. In boreal mixed woods, paper birch begin dying by 75 years after fire. At this time jack pine, black spruce, and white spruce begin to dominate or codominate. By 125 years most paper birch are dead [17]. In contrast to other boreal regions, paper birch persists in forests for more than 200 years in eastern Quebec. This is probably due to spruce budworm outbreaks which cause white spruce to decline after about 200 years [5]. In the East, paper birch is commonly replaced by northern hardwoods on well-drained mineral soils, and by spruces and balsam fir on shallow or poorly drained soils [58]. In Minnesota, paper birch is often replaced by communities dominated by shrubs, particularly beaked hazel [58]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Paper birch male catkins are partially formed in the fall, remain dormant in the winter, and expand to a length of about 4 inches (10 cm) before flowering in the spring [43]. Female catkins appear in the spring before the leaves are fully expanded. In the southern portion of its range flowering begins in April [24]. In Alaska flowering occurs in May and June [66]. Seed dispersal may begin as early as August, but most seed is dispersed from September throughout November [8]. Paper birch phenological events proceed as follows in northeastern Minnesota [2]: Phenological event Time bud burst April leafing out late April - early May flowering begins April pollen shed late April - May seedfall begins August leaf color change September leaf fall late September - October

Related categories for Species: Betula papyrifera | Paper Birch

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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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