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Alder

Alders are trees comprising the genus Alnus in the birch family Betulaceae. The genus comprises about 35 species[2] of monoecious trees and shrubs, a few reaching a large size, distributed throughout the north temperate zone with a few species extending into Central America, as well as the northern and southern Andes.[1]

Alder
Temporal range: Paleocene–Recent
Alnus serrulata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fagales
Family: Betulaceae
Subfamily: Betuloideae
Genus: Alnus
Mill.
Type species
Alnus glutinosa
(L.) Gaertn.
Synonyms[1]
  • Betula-alnus Marshall
  • Duschekia Opiz
  • Alnaster Spach
  • Clethropsis Spach
  • Semidopsis Zumagl.
  • Alnobetula (W.D.J.Koch) Schur.
  • Cremastogyne (H.J.P.Winkl.) Czerep.
Alder trees by the Beaulieu River at Longwater Lawn, Hampshire, England

Description

 
Pollen

With a few exceptions, alders are deciduous, and the leaves are alternate, simple, and serrated. The flowers are catkins with elongate male catkins on the same plant as shorter female catkins, often before leaves appear; they are mainly wind-pollinated, but also visited by bees to a small extent. These trees differ from the birches (Betula, another genus in the family) in that the female catkins are woody and do not disintegrate at maturity, opening to release the seeds in a similar manner to many conifer cones.

The largest species are red alder (A. rubra) on the west coast of North America, and black alder (A. glutinosa), native to most of Europe and widely introduced elsewhere, both reaching over 30 metres (100 ft). By contrast, the widespread Alnus alnobetula (green alder) is rarely more than a 5 m-tall (16 ft) shrub.

Taxonomy

Classification

 
A young bull moose browsing on Alnus in Homer, Alaska in 2010
 
The same spot from the same angle in 2021, the plants are now about 3.7–4.6 metres (12–15 ft) in height

The genus is divided into three subgenera:

Subgenus Alnus

Trees with stalked shoot buds, male and female catkins produced in autumn (fall) but stay closed over winter, pollinating in late winter or early spring, about 15–25 species, including:

  • Alnus acuminata Kunth – Andean alder, aliso. Mexico, Central and South America.
    • subsp. acuminata Kunth
    • subsp. arguta (Schltdl.) Furlow
    • subsp. glabrata (Fernald) Furlow
  • Alnus cordata (Loisel.) Duby – Italian alder. Italy, Corsica.
  • Alnus cremastogyne Burkill – China.
  • Alnus firma Siebold & Zucc.Kyūshū Island in Japan
  • Alnus glutinosa (L.) Gaertn. – black alder. Europe, Central Asia.
    • subsp. barbata (C.A.Mey.) Yalt.
    • subsp. glutinosa (L.) Gaertn.
    • subsp. incisa (Willd.) Regel
    • subsp. laciniata (Willd.) Regel
  • Alnus hirsuta (Spach) Rupr. – Manchurian alder. Japan, Korea, Manchuria, Siberia, Russian Far East
 
Speckled alder (Alnus incana subsp. rugosa)—leaves
  • Alnus incana (L.) Moench
    • subsp. incana (L.) Moench – speckled alder or grey alder. Eurasia, North America
    • subsp. kolaensis (Orlova) Á.Löve & D.Löve
    • subsp. rugosa (Du Roi) R.T.Clausen
    • subsp. tenuifolia (Nutt.) Breitung
  • Alnus japonica (Thunb.) Steud. – Japanese alder, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, eastern China, Russian Far East
  • Alnus jorullensis Kunth – Mexican alder. Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras.
    • subsp. lutea Furlow
    • subsp. jorullensis Kunth
  • Alnus lusitanica Vít, Douda, & Mandák - Spain, Portugal, Morocco[3]
  • Alnus matsumurae CallierHonshū Island in Japan
  • Alnus nepalensis D.Don – Nepalese alder. Himalayas, Tibet, Yunnan, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Thailand.
  • Alnus oblongifolia Torr. – Arizona alder. Arizona, New Mexico, Sonora, Chihuahua
  • Alnus orientalis Decne. – Oriental alder. Southern Turkey, northwest Syria, Cyprus, Lebanon, Iran
  • Alnus rhombifolia Nutt. – white alder. California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana
  • Alnus rohlenae Vít, Douda, & Mandák - Western Balkans[3]
  • Alnus rubra Bong. – red alder. Alaska, Yukon, British Columbia, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana.
 
Leaves of the tag alder
  • Alnus serrulata (Aiton) Willd. – hazel alder, tag alder or smooth alder. Eastern North America
  • Alnus subcordata C.A.Mey. – Caucasian alder. Caucasus, Iran
  • Alnus tenuifolia Nutt. – thinleaf or mountain alder. Northwestern North America
  • Alnus trabeculosa Hand.-Mazz. – China, Japan

Subgenus Clethropsis

Trees or shrubs with stalked shoot buds, male and female catkins produced in autumn (fall) and expanding and pollinating then, three species:

  • Alnus formosana (Burkill) Makino – Formosan alder. Taiwan
  • Alnus maritima (Marshall) Muhl. ex Nutt. – seaside alder. United States (Georgia, Delaware, Maryland, Oklahoma).
  • Alnus nitida (Spach) Endl. – Himalayan alder. Western Himalaya, Pakistan, India, Nepal.

Subgenus Alnobetula

Shrubs with shoot buds not stalked, male and female catkins produced in late spring (after leaves appear) and expanding and pollinating then, one to four species:

 
Green alder (Alnus viridis)

Not assigned to a subgenus

  • Alnus fauriei H.Lév. & Vaniot – Honshu Island in Japan
  • Alnus ferdinandi-coburgii C.K.Schneid. – southern China
  • Alnus glutipes (Jarm. ex Czerpek) Vorosch.
  • Alnus hakkodensis Hayashi – Honshu Island in Japan
  • Alnus henryi C.K.Schneid. – Taiwan
  • Alnus lanata Duthie ex Bean – Sichuan Province in China
  • Alnus mairei H.Lév. – Yunnan Province in China
  • Alnus paniculata Nakai – Korea
  • Alnus serrulatoides Callier – Japan
  • Alnus vermicularis Nakai – Korea

Species names with uncertain taxonomic status

The status of the following species is unresolved:[4]

  • Alnus balatonialis Borbás
  • Alnus cuneata Geyer ex Walp.
  • Alnus dimitrovii Jordanov & Kitanov
  • Alnus djavanshirii H.Zare – Iran
  • Alnus dolichocarpa H.Zare, Amini & Assadi – Iran
  • Alnus figerti Callier
  • Alnus frangula L. ex Huth
  • Alnus gigantea Nakai
  • Alnus glandulosa Sarg.
  • Alnus henedae Sugim.
  • Alnus hybrida Rchb.
  • Alnus laciniata Ehrh.
  • Alnus lobata Nyman
  • Alnus microphylla Arv.-Touv.
  • Alnus obtusifolia Mert. ex Regel
  • Alnus oxyacantha Lavalle
  • Alnus subrotunda Desf.
  • Alnus vilmoriana Lebas
  • Alnus washingtonia Wetzel

Hybrids

The following hybrids have been described:[4][5]

  • Alnus × elliptica Req.—Italy. (A. cordata × A. glutinosa)
     
    Alnus × spaethii
  • Alnus × fallacina Callier—Ohio, New York State, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine. (A. incana subsp. rugosa × A. serrulata)
  • Alnus × hanedae Suyinata—Japan. (A. firma × A. sieboldiana)
  • Alnus × hosoii Mizush.—Japan. (A. maximowiczii × A. pendula)
  • Alnus × mayrii Callier—Russian Far East, Japan. (A. hirsuta × A. japonica)
  • Alnus × peculiaris Hiyama—Kyūshū Island in Japan. (A. firma × A. pendula)
  • Alnus × pubescens Tausch.—Northern and central Europe. (A. glutinosa × A. incana)
  • Alnus × suginoi Sugim.—Japan.

The status of the following hybrids is unresolved:[4]

  • Alnus × aschersoniana Callier
  • Alnus × koehnei Callier
  • Alnus × ljungeri Murai
  • Alnus × purpusii Callier
  • Alnus × silesiaca Fiek
  • Alnus × spaethii Callier (A. japonica × A. subcordata)

Fossils

Phylogeny

The oldest fossil pollen that can be identified as Alnus is from northern Bohemia, dating to the late Paleocene, around 58 million years ago.[6]

Etymology

The common name alder evolved from the Old English word alor, which in turn is derived from Proto-Germanic root aliso.[7] The generic name Alnus is the equivalent Latin name, from whence French aulne and Spanish Alamo (Spanish term for "poplar").[7]

Ecology

Alders are commonly found near streams, rivers, and wetlands. Sometimes where the prevalence of alders is particularly prominent these are called alder carrs. In the Pacific Northwest of North America, the white alder (Alnus rhombifolia) unlike other northwest alders, has an affinity for warm, dry climates, where it grows along watercourses, such as along the lower Columbia River east of the Cascades and the Snake River, including Hells Canyon.

Alder leaves and sometimes catkins are used as food by numerous butterflies and moths.

A. glutinosa and A. viridis are classed as environmental weeds in New Zealand.[8] Alder leaves and especially the roots are important to the ecosystem because they enrich the soil with nitrogen and other nutrients.

Nitrogen fixation and succession of woodland species

Alder is particularly noted for its important symbiotic relationship with Frankia alni, an actinomycete, filamentous, nitrogen-fixing bacterium. This bacterium is found in root nodules, which may be as large as a human fist, with many small lobes, and light brown in colour. The bacterium absorbs nitrogen from the air and makes it available to the tree. Alder, in turn, provides the bacterium with sugars, which it produces through photosynthesis. As a result of this mutually beneficial relationship, alder improves the fertility of the soil where it grows, and as a pioneer species, it helps provide additional nitrogen for the successional species to follow.

 
A red alder seed is a tiny samara like those of all alders

Because of its abundance, red alder delivers large amounts of nitrogen to enrich forest soils. Red alder stands have been found to supply between 130 to 320 kilograms per hectare (120 to 290 pounds per acre) of nitrogen annually to the soil. From Alaska to Oregon, Alnus viridis subsp. sinuata (A. sinuata, Sitka Alder or Slide Alder), characteristically pioneer fresh, gravelly sites at the foot of retreating glaciers. Studies show that Sitka alder, a more shrubby variety of alder, adds nitrogen to the soil at an average rate of 60 kg/ha (54 lb/acre) per year, helping convert the sterile glacial terrain to soil capable of supporting a conifer forest. Alders are common among the first species to colonize disturbed areas from floods, windstorms, fires, landslides, etc. Alder groves often serve as natural firebreaks since these broad-leaved trees are much less flammable than conifers. Their foliage and leaf litter does not carry a fire well, and their thin bark is sufficiently resistant to protect them from light surface fires. In addition, the light weight of alder seeds – numbering 1.5 million per kilogram or 680,000 per pound – allows for easy dispersal by the wind. Although it outgrows coastal Douglas-fir for the first 25 years, it is very shade intolerant and seldom lives more than 100 years. Red alder is the Pacific Northwest's largest alder and the most plentiful and commercially important broad-leaved tree in the coastal Northwest. Groves of red alder 25 to 50 centimetres (10 to 20 in) in diameter intermingle with young Douglas-fir forests west of the Cascades, attaining a maximum height of 30 to 33 m (100 to 110 ft) in about sixty years and then are afflicted by heart rot. Alders largely help create conditions favorable for giant conifers that replace them.[2]

Parasites

Alder roots are parasitized by northern groundcone.

Uses

 
Alder coat of arms of Grossarl, Austria

The catkins of some alder species have a degree of edibility,[9] and may be rich in protein. Reported to have a bitter and unpleasant taste, they are more useful for survival purposes. The wood of certain alder species is often used to smoke various food items such as coffee, salmon, and other seafood.

Most of the pilings that form the foundation of Venice were made from alder trees.[10]

Alder bark contains the anti-inflammatory salicin, which is metabolized into salicylic acid in the body.[11] Some Native American cultures use red alder bark (Alnus rubra) to treat poison oak, insect bites, and skin irritations. Blackfeet Indians have traditionally used an infusion made from the bark of red alder to treat lymphatic disorders and tuberculosis. Recent clinical studies have verified that red alder contains betulin and lupeol, compounds shown to be effective against a variety of tumors.[12]

The inner bark of the alder, as well as red osier dogwood, or chokecherry, is used by some Indigenous peoples of the Americas in smoking mixtures, known as kinnikinnick, to improve the taste of the bearberry leaf.[13]

Alder is illustrated in the coat of arms for the Austrian town of Grossarl.

Electric guitars, most notably those manufactured by the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation, have been built with alder bodies since the 1950s. Alder is appreciated for its tone that is claimed to be tight and evenly balanced, especially when compared to mahogany, and has been adopted by many electric guitar manufacturers.

As a hardwood, alder is used in making furniture, cabinets, and other woodworking products.

Alder bark and wood (like oak and sweet chestnut) contain tannin and are traditionally used to tan leather.

A red dye can also be extracted from the outer bark, and a yellow dye from the inner bark.[14]

Culture

Ermanno Olmi's movie The Tree of Wooden Clogs (L' Albero Degli Zoccoli, 1978) refers in its title to alder, typically used to make clogs as in this movie's plot.[15][16]

References

  1. ^ a b "World Checklist of Selected Plant Families: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew". apps.kew.org.
  2. ^ a b Arno, Stephen F.; Hammerly, Ramona P. (2020) [1977]. Northwest Trees: Identifying & Understanding the Region's Native Trees (field guide ed.). Seattle: Mountaineers Books. pp. 208–215. ISBN 978-1-68051-329-5. OCLC 1141235469.
  3. ^ a b Vít, Petr; Douda, Jan; Krak, Karol; Havrdová, Alena; Mandák, Bohumil (2017). "Two new polyploid species closely related to Alnus glutinosa in Europe and North Africa – an analysis based on morphometry, karyology, flow cytometry and microsatellites". Taxon. 66 (3): 567–583. doi:10.12705/663.4.
  4. ^ a b c "The Plant List entry for Alnus". The Plant List, v.1.1. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the Missouri Botanical Garden. September 2013. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  5. ^ Govaerts R. "Alnus Mill". Plants of the World Online. Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  6. ^ Yang, Xiao‐Yue; Wang, Ze‐Fu; Luo, Wen‐Chun; Guo, Xin‐Yi; Zhang, Cai‐Hua; Liu, Jian‐Quan; Ren, Guang‐Peng (September 2019). "Plastomes of Betulaceae and phylogenetic implications". Journal of Systematics and Evolution. 57 (5): 508–518. doi:10.1111/jse.12479. ISSN 1674-4918. S2CID 91509152.
  7. ^ a b Harper, Douglas. "alder | Etymology, origin and meaning of alder by etymonline". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  8. ^ Clayson, Howell (May 2008). Consolidated list of environmental weeds in New Zealand. Wellington: Department of Conservation. ISBN 978-0-478-14412-3.
  9. ^ "Plant Search Result, see e.g. Alnus rubra". pfaf.org. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  10. ^ Nakasako, Eric. "A Look at Venice: Past and Present". Illumin. University of Southern California. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  11. ^ Ewing, Susan (2012). The Great Alaska Nature Factbook: A Guide to the State's Remarkable Animals, Plants, and Natural Features (2nd ed.). Graphic Arts Books. pp. 106, 142. ISBN 978-0-88240-868-2.
  12. ^ Tilford, Gregory L. (1997). Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West. ISBN 0-87842-359-1.
  13. ^ Staff (2009). . Discovering Lewis and Clark. The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation. Archived from the original on 18 December 2010. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
  14. ^ "Native Plant Dyes". United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  15. ^ PRESSO LA RIVA: L'ONTANO (tr. AT THE SHORE: THE ALDER), December 2015 www.officinadellambiente.com, accessed 17 November 2020
  16. ^ Ontano nero (tr. Black Alder) accessed 17 November 2020 uomoenatura.it

Further reading

  • Chen, Zhiduan; Li, Jianhua (2004). "Phylogenetics and Biogeography of Alnus (Betulaceae) Inferred from Sequences of Nuclear Ribosomal DNA ITS Region". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 165 (2): 325–335. doi:10.1086/382795. S2CID 85579093.

External links

  • Flora Europaea: Alnus
  • Flora of Bolivia: Alnus
  • Flora of China: Alnus
  • Flora of North America: Alnus
  • Flora of Pakistan: Alnus

alder, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, unrelated, plants, witch, alder, dwarf, alder, elder, trees, comprising, genus, alnus, birch, family, betulaceae, genus, comprises, about, species, monoecious, trees, shrubs, reaching, large, size, distribute. For other uses see Alder disambiguation Not to be confused with the unrelated plants witch alder dwarf alder and elder Alders are trees comprising the genus Alnus in the birch family Betulaceae The genus comprises about 35 species 2 of monoecious trees and shrubs a few reaching a large size distributed throughout the north temperate zone with a few species extending into Central America as well as the northern and southern Andes 1 AlderTemporal range Paleocene Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NAlnus serrulataScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder FagalesFamily BetulaceaeSubfamily BetuloideaeGenus AlnusMill Type speciesAlnus glutinosa L Gaertn Synonyms 1 Betula alnus Marshall Duschekia Opiz Alnaster Spach Clethropsis Spach Semidopsis Zumagl Alnobetula W D J Koch Schur Cremastogyne H J P Winkl Czerep Alder trees by the Beaulieu River at Longwater Lawn Hampshire England Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Classification 2 1 1 Subgenus Alnus 2 1 2 Subgenus Clethropsis 2 1 3 Subgenus Alnobetula 2 1 4 Not assigned to a subgenus 2 1 5 Species names with uncertain taxonomic status 2 1 6 Hybrids 2 1 7 Fossils 2 2 Phylogeny 2 3 Etymology 3 Ecology 3 1 Nitrogen fixation and succession of woodland species 3 2 Parasites 4 Uses 5 Culture 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDescription Edit Pollen With a few exceptions alders are deciduous and the leaves are alternate simple and serrated The flowers are catkins with elongate male catkins on the same plant as shorter female catkins often before leaves appear they are mainly wind pollinated but also visited by bees to a small extent These trees differ from the birches Betula another genus in the family in that the female catkins are woody and do not disintegrate at maturity opening to release the seeds in a similar manner to many conifer cones The largest species are red alder A rubra on the west coast of North America and black alder A glutinosa native to most of Europe and widely introduced elsewhere both reaching over 30 metres 100 ft By contrast the widespread Alnus alnobetula green alder is rarely more than a 5 m tall 16 ft shrub Taxonomy EditClassification Edit A young bull moose browsing on Alnus in Homer Alaska in 2010 The same spot from the same angle in 2021 the plants are now about 3 7 4 6 metres 12 15 ft in height The genus is divided into three subgenera Subgenus Alnus Edit Trees with stalked shoot buds male and female catkins produced in autumn fall but stay closed over winter pollinating in late winter or early spring about 15 25 species including Alnus acuminata Kunth Andean alder aliso Mexico Central and South America subsp acuminata Kunth subsp arguta Schltdl Furlow subsp glabrata Fernald Furlow Alnus cordata Loisel Duby Italian alder Italy Corsica Alnus cremastogyne Burkill China Alnus firma Siebold amp Zucc Kyushu Island in Japan Alnus glutinosa L Gaertn black alder Europe Central Asia subsp barbata C A Mey Yalt subsp glutinosa L Gaertn subsp incisa Willd Regel subsp laciniata Willd Regel Alnus hirsuta Spach Rupr Manchurian alder Japan Korea Manchuria Siberia Russian Far East Speckled alder Alnus incana subsp rugosa leaves Alnus incana L Moench subsp incana L Moench speckled alder or grey alder Eurasia North America subsp kolaensis Orlova A Love amp D Love subsp rugosa Du Roi R T Clausen subsp tenuifolia Nutt Breitung Alnus japonica Thunb Steud Japanese alder Japan Korea Taiwan eastern China Russian Far East Alnus jorullensis Kunth Mexican alder Mexico Guatemala Honduras subsp lutea Furlow subsp jorullensis Kunth Alnus lusitanica Vit Douda amp Mandak Spain Portugal Morocco 3 Alnus matsumurae Callier Honshu Island in Japan Alnus nepalensis D Don Nepalese alder Himalayas Tibet Yunnan Nepal Bhutan Myanmar Thailand Alnus oblongifolia Torr Arizona alder Arizona New Mexico Sonora Chihuahua Alnus orientalis Decne Oriental alder Southern Turkey northwest Syria Cyprus Lebanon Iran Alnus rhombifolia Nutt white alder California Nevada Oregon Washington Idaho Montana Alnus rohlenae Vit Douda amp Mandak Western Balkans 3 Alnus rubra Bong red alder Alaska Yukon British Columbia California Oregon Washington Idaho Montana Leaves of the tag alder Alnus serrulata Aiton Willd hazel alder tag alder or smooth alder Eastern North America Alnus subcordata C A Mey Caucasian alder Caucasus Iran Alnus tenuifolia Nutt thinleaf or mountain alder Northwestern North America Alnus trabeculosa Hand Mazz China JapanSubgenus Clethropsis Edit Trees or shrubs with stalked shoot buds male and female catkins produced in autumn fall and expanding and pollinating then three species Alnus formosana Burkill Makino Formosan alder Taiwan Alnus maritima Marshall Muhl ex Nutt seaside alder United States Georgia Delaware Maryland Oklahoma Alnus nitida Spach Endl Himalayan alder Western Himalaya Pakistan India Nepal Subgenus Alnobetula Edit Shrubs with shoot buds not stalked male and female catkins produced in late spring after leaves appear and expanding and pollinating then one to four species Green alder Alnus viridis Alnus alnobetula Ehrh K Koch subsp alnobetula Ehrh K Koch subsp crispa Aiton Raus subsp fruticosa Rupr Raus subsp sinuata Regel Raus subsp suaveolens Req Lambinon amp Kerguelen Alnus firma Siebold amp Zucc Kyushu Japan Alnus mandshurica Callier Hand Mazz Russian Far East northeastern China Korea Alnus maximowiczii Callier Japan Korea Russian Far East Alnus pendula Matsum Honshu and Hokkaido Japan Alnus sieboldiana Matsum Honshu Shikoku and Suwanose jima Japan Not assigned to a subgenus Edit Alnus fauriei H Lev amp Vaniot Honshu Island in Japan Alnus ferdinandi coburgii C K Schneid southern China Alnus glutipes Jarm ex Czerpek Vorosch Alnus hakkodensis Hayashi Honshu Island in Japan Alnus henryi C K Schneid Taiwan Alnus lanata Duthie ex Bean Sichuan Province in China Alnus mairei H Lev Yunnan Province in China Alnus paniculata Nakai Korea Alnus serrulatoides Callier Japan Alnus vermicularis Nakai KoreaSpecies names with uncertain taxonomic status Edit The status of the following species is unresolved 4 Alnus balatonialis Borbas Alnus cuneata Geyer ex Walp Alnus dimitrovii Jordanov amp Kitanov Alnus djavanshirii H Zare Iran Alnus dolichocarpa H Zare Amini amp Assadi Iran Alnus figerti Callier Alnus frangula L ex Huth Alnus gigantea Nakai Alnus glandulosa Sarg Alnus henedae Sugim Alnus hybrida Rchb Alnus laciniata Ehrh Alnus lobata Nyman Alnus microphylla Arv Touv Alnus obtusifolia Mert ex Regel Alnus oxyacantha Lavalle Alnus subrotunda Desf Alnus vilmoriana Lebas Alnus washingtonia Wetzel Hybrids Edit The following hybrids have been described 4 5 Alnus elliptica Req Italy A cordata A glutinosa Alnus spaethii Alnus fallacina Callier Ohio New York State Vermont New Hampshire Maine A incana subsp rugosa A serrulata Alnus hanedae Suyinata Japan A firma A sieboldiana Alnus hosoii Mizush Japan A maximowiczii A pendula Alnus mayrii Callier Russian Far East Japan A hirsuta A japonica Alnus peculiaris Hiyama Kyushu Island in Japan A firma A pendula Alnus pubescens Tausch Northern and central Europe A glutinosa A incana Alnus suginoi Sugim Japan The status of the following hybrids is unresolved 4 Alnus aschersoniana Callier Alnus koehnei Callier Alnus ljungeri Murai Alnus purpusii Callier Alnus silesiaca Fiek Alnus spaethii Callier A japonica A subcordata Fossils Edit Alnus heterodonta Newberry Meyer amp Manchester 1987 Oligocene fossil OregonPhylogeny Edit The oldest fossil pollen that can be identified as Alnus is from northern Bohemia dating to the late Paleocene around 58 million years ago 6 Etymology Edit The common name alder evolved from the Old English word alor which in turn is derived from Proto Germanic root aliso 7 The generic name Alnus is the equivalent Latin name from whence French aulne and Spanish Alamo Spanish term for poplar 7 Ecology EditAlders are commonly found near streams rivers and wetlands Sometimes where the prevalence of alders is particularly prominent these are called alder carrs In the Pacific Northwest of North America the white alder Alnus rhombifolia unlike other northwest alders has an affinity for warm dry climates where it grows along watercourses such as along the lower Columbia River east of the Cascades and the Snake River including Hells Canyon Alder leaves and sometimes catkins are used as food by numerous butterflies and moths A glutinosa and A viridis are classed as environmental weeds in New Zealand 8 Alder leaves and especially the roots are important to the ecosystem because they enrich the soil with nitrogen and other nutrients Nitrogen fixation and succession of woodland species Edit Alder is particularly noted for its important symbiotic relationship with Frankia alni an actinomycete filamentous nitrogen fixing bacterium This bacterium is found in root nodules which may be as large as a human fist with many small lobes and light brown in colour The bacterium absorbs nitrogen from the air and makes it available to the tree Alder in turn provides the bacterium with sugars which it produces through photosynthesis As a result of this mutually beneficial relationship alder improves the fertility of the soil where it grows and as a pioneer species it helps provide additional nitrogen for the successional species to follow A red alder seed is a tiny samara like those of all alders Because of its abundance red alder delivers large amounts of nitrogen to enrich forest soils Red alder stands have been found to supply between 130 to 320 kilograms per hectare 120 to 290 pounds per acre of nitrogen annually to the soil From Alaska to Oregon Alnus viridis subsp sinuata A sinuata Sitka Alder or Slide Alder characteristically pioneer fresh gravelly sites at the foot of retreating glaciers Studies show that Sitka alder a more shrubby variety of alder adds nitrogen to the soil at an average rate of 60 kg ha 54 lb acre per year helping convert the sterile glacial terrain to soil capable of supporting a conifer forest Alders are common among the first species to colonize disturbed areas from floods windstorms fires landslides etc Alder groves often serve as natural firebreaks since these broad leaved trees are much less flammable than conifers Their foliage and leaf litter does not carry a fire well and their thin bark is sufficiently resistant to protect them from light surface fires In addition the light weight of alder seeds numbering 1 5 million per kilogram or 680 000 per pound allows for easy dispersal by the wind Although it outgrows coastal Douglas fir for the first 25 years it is very shade intolerant and seldom lives more than 100 years Red alder is the Pacific Northwest s largest alder and the most plentiful and commercially important broad leaved tree in the coastal Northwest Groves of red alder 25 to 50 centimetres 10 to 20 in in diameter intermingle with young Douglas fir forests west of the Cascades attaining a maximum height of 30 to 33 m 100 to 110 ft in about sixty years and then are afflicted by heart rot Alders largely help create conditions favorable for giant conifers that replace them 2 Alder root nodules Whole root nodule Sectioned root nodulesParasites Edit Alder roots are parasitized by northern groundcone Uses Edit Alder coat of arms of Grossarl Austria The catkins of some alder species have a degree of edibility 9 and may be rich in protein Reported to have a bitter and unpleasant taste they are more useful for survival purposes The wood of certain alder species is often used to smoke various food items such as coffee salmon and other seafood Most of the pilings that form the foundation of Venice were made from alder trees 10 Alder bark contains the anti inflammatory salicin which is metabolized into salicylic acid in the body 11 Some Native American cultures use red alder bark Alnus rubra to treat poison oak insect bites and skin irritations Blackfeet Indians have traditionally used an infusion made from the bark of red alder to treat lymphatic disorders and tuberculosis Recent clinical studies have verified that red alder contains betulin and lupeol compounds shown to be effective against a variety of tumors 12 The inner bark of the alder as well as red osier dogwood or chokecherry is used by some Indigenous peoples of the Americas in smoking mixtures known as kinnikinnick to improve the taste of the bearberry leaf 13 Alder is illustrated in the coat of arms for the Austrian town of Grossarl Electric guitars most notably those manufactured by the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation have been built with alder bodies since the 1950s Alder is appreciated for its tone that is claimed to be tight and evenly balanced especially when compared to mahogany and has been adopted by many electric guitar manufacturers As a hardwood alder is used in making furniture cabinets and other woodworking products Alder bark and wood like oak and sweet chestnut contain tannin and are traditionally used to tan leather A red dye can also be extracted from the outer bark and a yellow dye from the inner bark 14 Culture EditErmanno Olmi s movie The Tree of Wooden Clogs L Albero Degli Zoccoli 1978 refers in its title to alder typically used to make clogs as in this movie s plot 15 16 References Edit a b World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Royal Botanic Gardens Kew apps kew org a b Arno Stephen F Hammerly Ramona P 2020 1977 Northwest Trees Identifying amp Understanding the Region s Native Trees field guide ed Seattle Mountaineers Books pp 208 215 ISBN 978 1 68051 329 5 OCLC 1141235469 a b Vit Petr Douda Jan Krak Karol Havrdova Alena Mandak Bohumil 2017 Two new polyploid species closely related to Alnus glutinosa in Europe and North Africa an analysis based on morphometry karyology flow cytometry and microsatellites Taxon 66 3 567 583 doi 10 12705 663 4 a b c The Plant List entry for Alnus The Plant List v 1 1 Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and the Missouri Botanical Garden September 2013 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Govaerts R Alnus Mill Plants of the World Online Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 14 December 2020 Yang Xiao Yue Wang Ze Fu Luo Wen Chun Guo Xin Yi Zhang Cai Hua Liu Jian Quan Ren Guang Peng September 2019 Plastomes of Betulaceae and phylogenetic implications Journal of Systematics and Evolution 57 5 508 518 doi 10 1111 jse 12479 ISSN 1674 4918 S2CID 91509152 a b Harper Douglas alder Etymology origin and meaning of alder by etymonline Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 22 March 2022 Clayson Howell May 2008 Consolidated list of environmental weeds in New Zealand Wellington Department of Conservation ISBN 978 0 478 14412 3 Plant Search Result see e g Alnus rubra pfaf org Retrieved 17 November 2020 Nakasako Eric A Look at Venice Past and Present Illumin University of Southern California Retrieved 22 January 2018 Ewing Susan 2012 The Great Alaska Nature Factbook A Guide to the State s Remarkable Animals Plants and Natural Features 2nd ed Graphic Arts Books pp 106 142 ISBN 978 0 88240 868 2 Tilford Gregory L 1997 Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West ISBN 0 87842 359 1 Staff 2009 Bearberry Discovering Lewis and Clark The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation Archived from the original on 18 December 2010 Retrieved 29 April 2011 Native Plant Dyes United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Retrieved 17 December 2014 PRESSO LA RIVA L ONTANO tr AT THE SHORE THE ALDER December 2015 www officinadellambiente com accessed 17 November 2020 Ontano nero tr Black Alder accessed 17 November 2020 uomoenatura itFurther reading EditChen Zhiduan Li Jianhua 2004 Phylogenetics and Biogeography of Alnus Betulaceae Inferred from Sequences of Nuclear Ribosomal DNA ITS Region International Journal of Plant Sciences 165 2 325 335 doi 10 1086 382795 S2CID 85579093 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alnus Wikispecies has information related to Alnus Flora Europaea Alnus Flora of Bolivia Alnus Flora of China Alnus Flora of North America Alnus Flora of Pakistan Alnus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alder amp oldid 1145689635, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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