
Betula populifolia - Wikipedia
Betula populifolia, known as the gray (or grey) birch, is a deciduous tree in the family Betulaceae. It is native to eastern North America and is most commonly found in the northeast United States as well as southern Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. [1]
How to Grow and Care for Gray Birch Trees - The Spruce
2024年3月26日 · Learn how to care for medium-sized, adaptable gray birch trees (Betula populifolia), which add year-round interest with catkins and color-changing bark.
Gray birch | The Morton Arboretum
Gray birch, a native to the Chicago region and typically found in cool climates, is a narrow, pyramidal tree. Bright green leaves turn a yellow fall color. Older trees develop a chalky white bark that does not peel.
Gray Birch Tree – Forestry.com
2025年1月9日 · The Gray Birch Tree (Betula populifolia) is a small but mighty tree with significant ecological and environmental value. Known for its adaptability and resilience, this tree plays a vital role in supporting ecosystems by stabilizing soil, providing shelter to …
Betula populifolia — gray birch - Go Botany
Gray birch is notable for its glossy-green, triangular and coarsely-toothed leaves. The bark of the saplings and trees is white, but punctuated with gray chevrons where the branches meet the trunk. It is a short-lived, small, pioneer species that readily colonizes clearings.
Betula populifolia (Gray Birch) - Gardenia
Betula populifolia, commonly known as Gray Birch, is a deciduous tree that’s part of the Betulaceae family. It is recognized for its slender, upright habit and distinctive white bark.
Betula populifolia - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Betula populifolia, commonly called gray birch, is a short-lived, narrow-columnar, suckering, deciduous tree that typically grows to 20-40’ tall. It most often appears in a multi-trunked form, but also grows with a single trunk.
Gray birch | Tree, Wood, Bark, Uses, & Habitat | Britannica
gray birch, (Betula populifolia), slender ornamental tree of the family Betulaceae, found in clusters on moist sites in northeastern North America. See also birch. Rarely 12 metres (40 feet) tall, it is covered almost to the ground with flexible branches that form a narrow pyramidal crown.
gray birch Betula populifolia from New England Wild Flower …
Gray birch is a great birch for urban planting, second only to river birch in its resistance to heat and humidity. It grows fast, with a slender shape at maturity and yellowish bark on young trees turning a beautiful silvery-grey. This species is highly resistant to the bronze birch-borer.
ENH258/ST099: Betula populifolia: Gray Birch - EDIS
A small, North American native tree, gray birch reaches 20- to 30-feet in height with a 10- to 20-foot spread, often forming loose, open thickets in the wild but easily trained to a single, slender trunk with an irregular, upright, pyramidal silhouette.