Description:
This
small tree is up to 30' tall, forming either a single or
multiple trunks (usually the latter) up to 1' across. There is a narrow
crown of leafy branches above each trunk. Trunk bark is white to light
gray with
horizontal fissures; it does not peel away. There are also flattened
arrowhead markings that are black from detached branches. Branch bark
is black to gray, while twigs are reddish brown with white lenticels.
Young shoots are light green and usually pubescent. Either opposite or
alternate leaves develop along the twigs and young shoots. The leaf
blades are up to 3" long and 2" across; they are deltate in shape and
doubly serrated along their their margins. The bases of these blades
are broadly obtuse, while their tips are elongated and slowly tapering.
The upper blade surface is medium green and glabrous, while the lower
surface is pale green and glabrous. The petioles are light green to
pale reddish green and somewhat flattened; they are up to 1½" long.
Gray
Birch is monoecious, producing separate male (staminate) and female
(pistillate) catkins on the same tree. Solitary male catkins (rarely 2
catkins) up to 3" long occur at the tips of twigs; these catkins have a
tendency to droop. Each male catkin
consists of numerous male florets and floral bracts. Each male floret
has 2 stamens, an insignificant calyx, and no corolla; male florets
occur in groups of 3 behind floral bracts that are cordate-orbicular
in shape. Erect female catkins about 1/3" (8 mm.) long occur among the
new
leaves of twigs. Each female catkin consists of numerous female
florets and floral bracts. Each female floret consists of a somewhat
flattened ovary with a pair of styles at its apex; female florets occur
in groups of 2-3 behind floral bracts that are 3-lobed. The blooming
period occurs from late spring to early summer and lasts about 1-2
weeks. Afterwards, female catkins become about 2/3" (16 mm.) long and
droop
downward as they mature. The samaras (winged seeds) are distributed by
the wind during late autumn or winter. The seed bodies of the samaras
are ellipsoid to obovoid and somewhat flattened. Each samara has a pair
of membranous wings that are more wide than the seed body. The root
system is shallow and branching.
Cultivation:
The preference is full sun, moist to dry-mesic conditions, and sandy
soil. This tree develops rapidly, but it is short-lived and prone to
storm damage.
Range
& Habitat: Gray Birch is a rare native tree in
Illinois, where
it is found in the NE section of the state (see
Distribution
Map).
Some
populations of Gray Birch in Illinois may be naturalized descendants of
cultivated trees. It is more common further to the east and
northeast. Habitats include burnt-over areas of sandy
woodlands and sandy savannas, scrubby sand prairies, thickets, banks of
streams, and abandoned sandy fields. Gray Birch is a pioneer tree that
depends on wildfires and other kinds of disturbance to maintain itself
in these habitats.
Faunal
Associations: Many kinds of insects feed on the leaves and
catkins,
suck plant juices, or bore through the wood of Gray Birch and other
birches (
Betula spp.).
These insects include: caterpillars of the
butterflies
Nymphalis
antiopa (Mourning Cloak) and
Nymphalis vau-album
j-album (Compton Tortoiseshell); caterpillars of such
moths as
Acronicta betulae
(Birch Dagger Moth),
Drepana
arcuata (Masked Birch
Caterpillar),
Lithophane
hemina (Hemina Pinion),
Peridea ferruginea
(Chocolate Prominent), and
Pero morrisonaria (Morrison's
Pero); the
larvae of
Arge
pectoralis (Birch Sawfly),
Croesus latitarsus
(Dusky
Birch Sawfly), and
Dimorphopteryx
melanognathus (Fringed Birch Sawfly);
Euceraphis punctipennis (European
Birch Aphid) and the leafhopper
Erythridula praecisa;
Kleidocerys resedae (Birch
Catkin Bug); the
leaf-footed bugs
Elasmostethus
interstinctus and
Elasmucha
lateralis;
Altica
betulae (Birch Flea Beetle) and the leaf beetle
Scelolyperus meracus;
the wood-boring larvae of
Agrilus
anxius (Bronze
Birch Borer) and
Xylotrechus
quadrimaculatus (Birch & Beech
Girdler). Vertebrate animals use birch trees as a source of food and
protective cover. Among birds, the Ruffed Grouse feeds on the catkins
and buds of birches, while the Pine Siskin and Black-Capped Chickadee
eat the seeds. The Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker drills holes in the thin
bark of these trees to feed on the sap. Beavers feed on the bark and
wood, while White-Tailed Deer use the twigs as a source of winter
browse.
Photographic
Location: A scrubby sand prairie at Kitty Todd Nature
Preserve in NW
Ohio.
Comments:
The
wood of Gray Birch is relatively soft and weak, but it is sometimes
used to make wooden spools, clothes pins, toothpicks, and other wooden
objects. It is also used as firewood and to make paper pulp. Gray Birch
is an attractive tree that resembles the commonly cultivated
Betula
pendula (European White Birch). Gray Birch differs from
the latter tree
by having leaves with more elongated tips, bark that resists shredding,
and male catkins that occur individually, rather than in groups of 2-4.