Information about Poplar

Poplar, Aspen, Cottonwood
Enlarge picture
Western Balsam Poplar foliage

Western Balsam Poplar foliage
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Magnoliopsida
Order:Malpighiales
Family:Salicaceae
Genus:Populus
L.
Sections


Sect. Populus
Sect. Aegiros
Sect. Tacamahaca
Sect. Leucoides
Sect. Turanga
Populus is a genus of trees which includes the cottonwoods, poplars, and aspens, all of which are sometimes termed poplars (in some areas "popple").

Poplars are deciduous, and the leaves turn bright gold to yellow before they fall during autumn. The leaves of many poplars, including the cottonwoods and aspens (but not the balsam poplars), have laterally-flattened stems, so that breezes easily cause the leaves to wobble back and forth, giving the whole tree a "twinkling" appearance in a breeze.

Like willows, many poplars have very strong and invasive root systems, so they must not be planted too close to houses or water pipes as they will crack walls and pipes in their search for moisture.

Poplars of the cottonwood section are often wetlands or riparian trees. The aspens are among the most important boreal broadleaf trees.

Poplars and aspens are important food plants for the larvae of a large number of Lepidoptera species - see List of Lepidoptera that feed on poplars.

Classification

Enlarge picture
A fastigiate Black Poplar cultivar of the Plantierensis Group, in Hungary
A poplar in autumn colours
  • Populus section Populus - aspens and white poplar. Circumpolar subarctic and cool temperate, and mountains farther south (white poplar warm temperate)
  • Populus tremula - Common Aspen, Trembling Aspen or Eurasian Aspen. Europe, northern Asia.
  • Populus tremuloides - Quaking Aspen or Trembling Aspen. North America.
  • Populus grandidentata - Bigtooth Aspen. Eastern North America.
  • Populus adenopoda - Chinese Aspen. Eastern Asia.
  • Populus sieboldii - Japanese Aspen. Eastern Asia.
  • Populus alba - White Poplar. Southern Europe to central Asia.
  • Populus × canescens (P. alba × P. tremula) - Grey Poplar
  • Populus section Aegiros - black poplars or cottonwoods. North America, Europe, western Asia; temperate
  • Populus nigra - Black Poplar. Europe.
  • Populus × canadensis (P. nigra × P. deltoides) - Hybrid Black Poplar
  • Populus deltoides - Eastern Cottonwood. Eastern North America.
  • Populus fremontii - Fremont Cottonwood. Western North America.
  • Populus petrowskyana - Russian Poplar. Europe/Asia.
  • Populus section Tacamahaca - balsam poplars. North America, Asia; cool temperate
  • Populus angustifolia - Willow-leaved Poplar or Narrowleaf Cottonwood. Central North America.
  • Populus balsamifera - Ontario Balsam Poplar. Northern North America.
  • Populus trichocarpa - Western Balsam Poplar or Black Cottonwood. Western North America.
  • Populus laurifolia - Laurel-leaf Poplar. Central Asia.
  • Populus simonii - Simon's Poplar. Northeast Asia.
  • Populus maximowiczii - Maximowicz' Poplar. Northeast Asia.
  • Populus section Leucoides - necklace poplars or bigleaf poplars. Eastern North America, eastern Asia; warm temperate
  • Populus heterophylla - Swamp Cottonwood. Southeastern North America.
  • Populus lasiocarpa - Chinese Necklace Poplar. Eastern Asia.
  • Populus wilsonii - Wilson's Poplar. Eastern Asia.
  • Populus section Turanga - subtropical poplars. Southwest Asia, east Africa; subtropical to tropical
  • Populus euphratica - Euphrates Poplar. Southwest Asia.
  • Populus ilicifolia - Tana River Poplar. East Africa.
  • Populus section Abaso - Mexican poplars. Mexico; subtropical to tropical
  • Populus mexicana - Mexico Poplar. Mexico.

Flowers

The flowers are dioecious and appear in early spring before the leaves. They are borne in long, drooping, sessile or pedunculate aments which are produced from buds formed in the axils of the leaves of the previous year. The pistillate aments lengthen very considerably before maturity. The flowers are solitary, each one seated in a cup-shaped disk which is borne on the base of a scale which is itself attached to the rachis of the ament. The scales are obovate, lobed and fringed, membranous, hairy or smooth, usually caducous. The staminate flowers are without calyx or corolla and consist simply of a group of stamens, four to twelve, or twelve to sixty, inserted on a disk; filaments short, pale yellow; anthers oblong, purple or red, introrse, two-celled; cells opening longitudinally.[1]

The pistillate flower is equally destitute of calyx and corolla and consists of a one-celled ovary seated in a cup-shaped disk. The style is short, stigmas two to four, variously lobed; ovules numerous. The fruit is a two to four-valved capsule, ripening before the full development of the leaf; greenish or reddish-brown. The seed is light brown and surrounded by a tuft of long, soft, white hairs.[1]

Cultivation and uses

Fast-growing hybrid poplars are grown on plantations in many areas for pulpwood and used for the manufacture of paper. The wood is generally white, often with a slightly yellowish cast. It is also sold as inexpensive hardwood timber, used for pallets and cheap plywood; more specialised uses include matches and the boxes in which camembert cheese is sold. Poplar wood is widely used in the snowboard industry for the snowboard "core", because it has exceptional flexibility.

Poplar was the most common wood used in Italy for panel paintings; the Mona Lisa and indeed most famous Early Renaissance Italian paintings are on poplar.

Due to its tannic acid content, the bark has been used in Europe for tanning leather.[1]

There has been some interest in using poplar as an energy crop/biofuel, particuarly in light of its high energy in/energy out ratio, large carbon mitigation potential and fast growth.

In the September 2006 issue of Science, it was announced that a species of poplar, Populus trichocarpa, was the first tree to have its full DNA code sequenced (published in full here).

Poplar is also a wood that, particularly when seasoned, makes a good hearth for a bow drill. Poplar was picked as the material for the bones of "Buster", the crash test dummy used in the TV show MythBusters, after some experiments revealed that it fractures under approximately the same loads as human bone. Poplar is sometimes used in the bodies of electric guitars and drums.

Populus is among the oldest type of dicotyledonous plants. When sequoias, pines and cycads made up the bulk of the Cretaceous forests of Greenland, the poplar alone of deciduous trees was present.[1]

References

1. ^ Keeler, Harriet L. (1900). Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. New York: Charles Scriber's Sons, 410-412. 

External links

Poplar may refer to:
  • Poplar tree
  • Liriodendron also knowns as "tulip tree", "yellow poplar" or "tulip poplar"
In the United Kingdom:
  • Poplar, London
  • Metropolitan Borough of Poplar (1900-1965)
  • Poplar DLR station
In the United States:

..... Click the link for more information.
Scientific classification or biological classification is a method by which biologists group and categorize species of organisms. Scientific classification also can be called scientific taxonomy, but should be distinguished from folk taxonomy, which lacks scientific basis.
..... Click the link for more information.
Plantae
Haeckel, 1866[1]

Divisions

Green algae
  • Chlorophyta
  • Charophyta
Land plants (embryophytes)
  • Non-vascular land plants (bryophytes)

..... Click the link for more information.
Magnoliophyta

Classes

Magnoliopsida - Dicots
Liliopsida - Monocots

The flowering plants or angiosperms are the most widespread group of land plants. The flowering plants and the gymnosperms comprise the two extant groups of seed plants.
..... Click the link for more information.
Magnoliopsida
Brongniart

Orders

See text.
Dicotyledons, or "dicots", is a name for a group of flowering plants whose seed typically contains two embryonic leaves or cotyledons.
..... Click the link for more information.
Malpighiales

Families
  • Achariaceae
  • Balanopaceae
  • Bonnetiaceae
  • Caryocaraceae
  • Chrysobalanaceae
  • Clusiaceae
  • Ctenolophonaceae
  • Dichapetalaceae
  • Elatinaceae
  • Erythroxylaceae (coca family)
  • Euphorbiaceae (spurge family)

..... Click the link for more information.
Salicaceae
Mirb.

Genera

See text.

Salicaceae is a family of flowering plants. Recent genetic studies by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) has greatly expanded the circumscription of the family to contain 57 genera.
..... Click the link for more information.
Carolus Linnaeus (Carl von Linné)

Carl von Linné, Alexander Roslin, 1775. Currently owned by and hanging at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
..... Click the link for more information.
Populus

Species

Populus adenopoda
Populus alba
Populus grandidentata
Populus sieboldii
Populus tremula
Populus tremuloides

Aspens
..... Click the link for more information.
Aegiros

Species

Populus deltoides L.
Populus fremontii
Populus nigra L.
For , see .
The cottonwoods are three species of poplars in the section Aegiros of the genus Populus
..... Click the link for more information.
balsam poplars Populus sect. Tacamahaca are a group of about 10 species of poplars, indigenous to North America and eastern Asia, distinguished by the balsam scent of their buds, the whitish undersides of their leaves, and the leaf petiole being round (not
..... Click the link for more information.
Aegiros

Species

Populus deltoides L.
Populus fremontii
Populus nigra L.
For , see .
The cottonwoods are three species of poplars in the section Aegiros of the genus Populus
..... Click the link for more information.
Populus

Species

Populus adenopoda
Populus alba
Populus grandidentata
Populus sieboldii
Populus tremula
Populus tremuloides

Aspens
..... Click the link for more information.
Deciduous means "temporary" or "tending to fall off" (deriving from the Latin word decidere, to fall off) and is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that lose their leaves seasonally.
..... Click the link for more information.
Autumn (also known as Fall in North American English) is one of the four temperate seasons. Autumn marks the transition from summer into winter. In the northern hemisphere, the start of autumn is generally considered to be around September and in the southern hemisphere, its
..... Click the link for more information.
riparian zone is the interface between land and a flowing surface water body. Plant communities along the river margins are called riparian vegetation, characterized by hydrophilic plants.
..... Click the link for more information.
Boreal is usually applied to ecosystems localized to subarctic (Northern hemisphere) and subantarctic (Southern hemisphere) zones, although Austral is also used for the latter.
..... Click the link for more information.
larva (Latin; plural larvae) is a juvenile form of animal with indirect development, undergoing metamorphosis (for example, insects or amphibians).

The larva can look completely different from the adult form, for example, a caterpillar differs from a butterfly.
..... Click the link for more information.
Clipper Parthenos sylvia]]
The Clipper Parthenos sylvia


Scientific classification

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Arthropoda
..... Click the link for more information.
Poplars (Populus spp.) are used as food plants by the larvae of a large number of Lepidoptera species:

Monophagous

Species which feed exclusively on Populus
  • Bucculatricidae
  • Bucculatrix staintonella

..... Click the link for more information.
Populus

Species

Populus adenopoda
Populus alba
Populus grandidentata
Populus sieboldii
Populus tremula
Populus tremuloides

Aspens
..... Click the link for more information.
P. tremula

Binomial name
Populus tremula
L.

Populus tremula is the Common Aspen (or Eurasian Aspen), a deciduous tree of the poplar family.
..... Click the link for more information.
P. tremuloides

Binomial name
Populus tremuloides
Michx.

Populus tremuloides, the Quaking Aspen or Trembling Aspen
..... Click the link for more information.
P. alba

Binomial name
Populus alba
L.

The White Poplar (Populus alba) is a species of poplar, most closely related to the aspens (Populus sect. Populus).
..... Click the link for more information.
Aegiros

Species

Populus deltoides L.
Populus fremontii
Populus nigra L.
For , see .
The cottonwoods are three species of poplars in the section Aegiros of the genus Populus
..... Click the link for more information.
P. nigra

Binomial name
Populus nigra
L.

Black Poplar (Populus nigra) is a species of poplar in the cottonwood section of the genus Populus
..... Click the link for more information.
P. nigra

Binomial name
Populus nigra
L.

Black Poplar (Populus nigra) is a species of poplar in the cottonwood section of the genus Populus
..... Click the link for more information.
P. deltoides

Binomial name
Populus deltoides
W.Bartram ex Marshall

The Eastern Cottonwood (Populus deltoides
..... Click the link for more information.
balsam poplars Populus sect. Tacamahaca are a group of about 10 species of poplars, indigenous to North America and eastern Asia, distinguished by the balsam scent of their buds, the whitish undersides of their leaves, and the leaf petiole being round (not
..... Click the link for more information.
P. balsamifera

Binomial name
Populus balsamifera

The Ontario Balsam Poplar, Populus balsamifera is a species of the genus Populus.
..... Click the link for more information.


This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia.org - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the wikipedia encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
Herod_Archelaus


page counter