(Redirected from Alaska Birch)
'''Betula neoalaskana''' (syn. ''B. resinifera'') or 'Alaska Birch', also known as 'Alaska Paper Birch' or 'Resin Birch', is a species of
birch native to
Alaska and northern
Canada. Its range covers most of interior Alaska, and extends from the southern
Brooks Range to the
Chugach Range in Alaska, including the
Turnagain Arm and northern half of the
Kenai Peninsula, easterward from
Norton Sound into western
Ontario, and north to
Northwest Territories and southern
Nunavut.
This tree typically grows to 15-20 m tall, occasionally up to 25 m, and achieves a trunk diameter of 20-40 cm, rarely to more than 60 cm, and a narrow crown. It grows in a variety of habitats, from wetlands to ridgetops at altitudes of 100-1200 m. The mature
bark ranges widely in color, from pure white to red, yellowish, pinkish, or gray. Bark of twigs, seedlings, and saplings is dark, from reddish to almost black, and covered with resin glands. The
leaves are triangular-ovate, 3-8 cm long and 2-6 cm broad, with a truncate base and an acuminate apex, and a double-serrated margin. The
fruiting
catkins are 2-4 cm long and about 1 cm broad.
Although it is
diploid like the closely related to the
Eurasian Silver Birch and the eastern American
Gray Birch, it frequently
hybridizes with the
hexaploid Paper Birch; the hybrid is known as ''Betula × winteri''. Hybrids also occur with
American Dwarf Birch, named ''Betula × uliginosa''.
See also
Birch syrup
References
★
Flora of North America: ''Betula neoalaskana''
★ Packee, E. C. (2004). Taxonomy and Evolution of Alaska's Birches. ''Agroborealis'' 36(1): 20.
★ Hunt, D. (1993). ''Betula. Proceedings of the IDS Betula Symposium 2-4 October 1992''. International Dendrology Society.