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Silver poplar

Also known as: white poplar

Populus alba L.

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Silver poplar bark
Silver poplar bark
Silver poplar leaves
Silver poplar bark
Silver poplar bud and leaf scar
Silver poplar habit
Silver poplar leaf undersurface
Silver poplar buds
Silver poplar leaf

Morphology

Trunk
Trunk ascending to erect; bark light gray, furrows deep, ridges wide, flat, with scattered rhombic grayish-brown depressions; wood yellowish brown or tan, soft.
Twigs
Olive-brown to orangish brown, rigid, initially densely white-tomentose, glabrate; leaf scars crescent-shaped; buds reddish brown, ovoid, .2 to .7 inch, apex acute, scales tomentose.
Leaves
Deciduous, alternate, simple, very dissimilar leaves on same plant; stipules caducous, deltate; petiole .8 to 1.6 inch, flattened, tomentose; blade ovate, (.4-)1.2 to 3.2 inches long, (.3-).4 to 2.8 inches wide, base rounded to nearly cordate, apex obtuse to acute, lower surface white, densely tomentose, upper surface dark green, sparsely pubescent, especially along veins, margins of early leaves unlobed, coarsely sinuate-dentate with 3-8 teeth on each side, margins of late leaves palmately 3-5-lobed, irregularly crenate-dentate.
Flowers
Inflorescences axillary from wood of previous year, catkins, pendent; staminate: 2 to 4 inches, many-flowered; peduncle essentially absent; pedicels .04 to .16 inch, glabrous, bracts .06 to .08 inch; pistillate: 1.6 to 2.8 inches, many-flowered; peduncle .2 to .5 inch, glabrous; pedicels .02 to .04 inch, bracts .08 to .12 inch. Flowers unisexual, radially symmetric; perianth a saucer-shaped disk, .03 to .04 inch diam.; staminate: stamens 6-12; pistillate: pistil 1, ovary green superior, 2-locular; styles 2; stigmas 2, 2-lobed, lobes linear, spreading to erect.
Fruit
April-June; capsules, green to greenish brown, ovoid, .12 to .24 inch long, .03 to .5 inch wide; seeds 2-6 (apparently not produced in Kansas), brown, compressed-oblong, .04 to .06 inch long, .01 to .o4 inch wide, base with dense tuft of capillary hairs, apex pointed.

Ecology

Habitat
Hedgerows, woodlots, abandoned farms and home sites, pastures, roadsides, disturbed areas.
Distribution
Scattered throughout Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

Populus alba is native to Eurasia and widely cultivated in North America as a shade tree. In Kansas, it occurs primarily as large clonal colonies from root-suckers produced by planted individuals. Because most colonies are single clones and therefore either staminate or pistillate, fruits are rarely produced here.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Salicaceae - Willow Family
Height
Trees, to 65 feet
Last Updated
2021-01-25
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: March, April