Common Name: GEORGIA ALDER. Scientific Name: Alnus maritima (Marshall) Muhlenberg ex Nuttall ssp. georgiensis Schrader & Graves

Similar documents
Previously Used Scientific Names: Myrica floridana (Chapman) A.W. Wood

Common Name: BUTTERNUT

Common Name: ELLIOTT S CROTON. Scientific Name: Croton elliottii Chapman. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Common Name: TRAILING MEADOWRUE. Scientific Name: Thalictrum debile Buckley. Other Commonly Used Names: southern meadow-rue

Other Commonly Used Names: Fremont s virgins-bower, Fremont s clematis, Fremont s curly-heads

Common Name: VARIABLE-LEAF INDIAN-PLANTAIN. Scientific Name: Arnoglossum diversifolium (Torrey & Gray) H.E. Robinson. Other Commonly Used Names: none

Common Name: PORTER S REED GRASS. Scientific Name: Calamagrostis porteri A. Gray ssp. porteri. Other Commonly Used Names: Porter s reed bent

Previously Used Scientific Names: Kalmia angustifolia var. carolina (Small) Fernald

Common Name: PONDSPICE

Common Name: AMERICAN MOUNTAIN-ASH

Common Name: AWNED MEADOWBEAUTY. Scientific Name: Rhexia aristosa Britton. Other Commonly Used Names: awnpetal meadowbeauty

Common Name: ALABAMA WARBONNET. Scientific Name: Jamesianthus alabamensis Blake & Sherff. Other Commonly Used Names: Jamesianthus

Previously Used Scientific Names: Helianthus X verticillatus E.E. Watson

Previously Used Scientific Names: Portulaca teretifolia ssp. cubensis (Urban) Ortega

Common Name: VIRGINIA SPIRAEA. Scientific Name: Spiraea virginiana Britton. Other Commonly Used Names: Appalachian spiraea

Common Name: GEORGIA ROCKCRESS. Scientific Name: Arabis georgiana Harper. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Previously Used Scientific Names: Cypripedium daultonii Soukop (nomen nudum), C. furcatum Rafinesque.

Previously Used Scientific Names: Clinopodium ashei (Weatherby) Small, Satureja ashei Weatherby

Common Name: ALABAMA LEATHER FLOWER. Scientific Name: Clematis socialis Kral. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Previously Used Scientific Names: Ophrys smallii (Wiegand) House, Listera reniformis Small

Previously Used Scientific Names: Benzoin melissifolium (Walter) Nees von Esenbeck

Common Name: RADFORD S SEDGE. Scientific Name: Carex radfordii L.L. Gaddy. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Common Name: FLORIDA TORREYA. Scientific Name: Torreya taxifolia Arnott. Other Commonly Used Names: stinking-cedar, gopherwood

Common Name: RELICT TRILLIUM. Scientific Name: Trillium reliquum J.D. Freeman. Other Commonly Used Names: none. Previously Used Scientific Names: none

Other Commonly Used Names: trailing spiny-pod, sandhill spiny pod

Other Commonly Used Names: Chattahoochee toadshade, mimic trillium, deceptive trillium

Other Commonly Used Names: spreading false foxglove, spreading yellow false foxglove

Previously Used Scientific Names: Isotria affinis (C.F. Austin) Rydberg, Pogonia affinis C.F. Austin ex A. Gray

Which Willow? Non-native gray willow (Salix cinerea) Amanda Weise Ecological Programs Coordinator

Common plant species of Seattle Parks (winter 2010) BIOL 476 Conservation Biology

How to identify American chestnut trees. American Chestnut Tree. Identification Resources. For the Appalachian Trail Mega-Transect.

American Chestnut Castanea dentata

AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA -- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE ST. PAUL MINNESOTI' 5~

Prepared by Henry Mann, Nature Enthusiast/Naturalist for the Pasadena Ski and Nature Park The Pasadena Ski and Nature Park is situated in a second

American beech. (Fagus grandifolia) Description: Only species of this genus found in North America.

It s found in all six New England states.

Willow Tit Help Guide Three Common Willow Species

DATA SHEET: TREE ID. Leaf Additional Information Common Name Scientific name Moisture Habitat Preference

Common shrubs shrub-steppe habitats

American Elm Ulmus americana

Burs and Nuts American vs. Chinese. Chinese vs. American Chestnut

Identification of Sedge and Sedge-Like Weeds in Florida Citrus 1

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

All material 2010 Virginia Tech Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation

OLEACEAE OLIVE FAMILY

Piñon Pine

Seabeach Amaranth. Summary. Protection Threatened in New York State, Threatened federally.

CYPERACEAE SEDGE FAMILY

Fagaceae - beech family! Quercus alba white oak

CUPRESSACEAE CYPRESS FAMILY

Carex kobomugi (Japanese sedge Asiatic sand sedge )

Plant Profiles: HORT 2242 Landscape Plants II

Sugar maple tree named Legacy

Plant Profiles: HORT 2242 Landscape Plants II

Arecaceae palm family Washingtonia filifera California fanpalm

Plant Profiles: HORT 2242 Landscape Plants II

Cornaceae dogwood family Cornus florida flowering dogwood

Plant Profiles: HORT 2242 Landscape Plants II

Porcelain Berry Identification, Ecology, and Control in the UW-Madison Lakeshore Nature Preserve

Excerpted from. buy this book. by the Regents of the University of California. Not to be reproduced without publisher s written permission.

G. Don Araucariaceae. Araucaria bidwillii. LOCAL NAMES English (bunya pine,bunya bunya pine,bunya bunya)

Part 1: Naming the cultivar

Plant Profiles: HORT 2241 Landscape Plants I

Plant Profiles: HORT 2242 Landscape Plants II

Native Plants in the South Pasadena Nature Park - #1

Monitoring the Spread of Magnolia kobus within the Royal Botanical Gardens Nature Sanctuaries. Katherine Moesker October 14, 2015

Alder. Ash WINTER TREE ID

PRUNUS AMERICANA (ROSACEAE) IN THE ARKANSAS FLORA

Vine Maple Acer circinatum Maple Family (Aceraceae)

PROTOCOLS FOR SUMMER 2017 WHALE WATCHING SEASON SAN DIEGO NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM WHALERS 2017

Junipers of Colorado. Rocky Mountain Juniper

Spurge Laurel Daphne laureola

COMMELINACEAE SPIDERWORT FAMILY

Know Your Flora. A Guide to the Most Widespread Trees, Shrubs, Flowers and Grasses in the Truckee Meadows and Surrounding Hillsides

SHRUBS ALTERNATE COMPOUND LEAVES

Unique and Unusual Plants

Řepka R., Veselá P. & Mráček J. (2014): Are there hybrids between Carex flacca and C. tomentosa

broadly winged samaras milky sap stout twigs broad leaves, green on both sides winter buds with only 4-6 scales Acer platanoides Norway Maple

The Hardy Hornbeam History And Uses Of The Tree In The UK

Barstow woolly sunflower (Eriophyllum mohavense)

Identification of Grass Weeds in Florida Citrus1

Field Guide to the Identification of Cogongrass. With comparisons to other commonly found grass species in the Southeast

Thorne s Buckwheat (Eriogonum thornei)

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C Price 10 cents Stock Number

Learn 10 species. Photos (unless noted) by Susan Ballinger

Red Rock Poppy (Eschscholzia minutiflora ssp. twisselmannii) [Species photo to come]

The Beauty of the Trees & Shrubs in Farndon

Northern Monkshood. Summary. Protection Endangered in New York State, Threatened federally.

Terrestrial Invasive Species. Susan Burks Invasive Spp Program Coord MNDNR, Forestry

TREES OF THE OAK RIDGES MORAINE

A Tree Of Confusion OUTREACH PUBLICATION SFNR06-3. by Dr. Kim D. Coder, Warnell School of Forestry & Natural Resources, University of Georgia 7/2006

Alnus viridis (A. viridis ssp. fru-cosa)

Betula neoalaskana. Alnus viridis (A. viridis ssp. fru-cosa) 2/27/13

Phylogeny of Eudicots (or Tricolpates) Eudicots (or Tricolpates)

Vegetative Key to Common Grasses of Western Washington

Evergreen Huckleberry Vaccinium ovatum

I know it s an oak, but which one is it?

Crop Identification - Alfalfa Deep taproot and welldeveloped

A Trail Workers Guide to Sensitive Species

Japanese Knotweed Red Winged Blackbird

Transcription:

Common Name: GEORGIA ALDER Scientific Name: Alnus maritima (Marshall) Muhlenberg ex Nuttall ssp. georgiensis Schrader & Graves Other Commonly Used Names: seaside alder

Previously Used Scientific Names: Alnus metoporina Furlow Family: Betulaceae (birch) Rarity Ranks: G3/S1 State Legal Status: Threatened Federal Legal Status: none Federal Wetland Status: OBL Description: Shrub up to 33 feet (10 m) tall with a narrow crown and many, erect trunks with smooth bark. Twigs green and hairy when young, smooth and reddish-gray when older. Leaves 1¾ - 3½ inches long, ¾ - 2 inches wide (4.5-9 cm long, 2-5 cm wide), alternate, deciduous, with toothed edges, rounded or tapering bases, and 6-10 parallel veins on each side of the midvein; upper surface dark green and shiny; lower surface pale green with dark gland dots and yellowish hairs on the veins. Female flowers in small catkins, maturing in late summer to solitary, woody, oval fruiting cones about 1 inch (1.2-2.8 cm) long and ¾ inch (1.2-2.2 cm) wide, on stalks in the angle between leaf stalk and twig; cones last for a year or more. Male flowers tiny, in drooping clusters of elongated catkins. Female and male flowers occur on the same plant. Similar Species: Tag alder (Alnus serrulata) leaves are dark green on the lower surface and have 8-14 parallel veins on each side of the midvein. Fruiting cones are smaller, about ¾ inch (1-2.2 cm) long and ⅜ inch (0.6-1.2 cm) wide, in clusters of 3-5 cones with very short or no stalks. Tag alder flowers only in the spring. Related Rare Species: None in Georgia. Habitat: Sunny areas in ponds and spring-fed swamps. Life History: Alnus maritima occurs in 3 widely disjunct populations, with each population considered a separate subspecies. The populations on the Delmarva Peninsula of Delaware and Maryland are named after the seaside location of the first observed plants ssp. maritima. The plants in Oklahoma and Georgia are also named for their locations ssp. oklahomensis and ssp. georgiensis, respectively. Georgia s plants occur more than 700 miles from both the Oklahoma and Delmarva Peninsula populations. Botanists believe that Alnus maritima was once widely distributed across North America and that changing environmental conditions eliminated the species from all but its 3 currently known locations. Once isolated from each other, the populations diverged genetically to a degree that warrants recognizing each disjunct group of plants as separate subspecies. Oklahoma plants have longer, narrower leaves and cones and a rounder growth form than either the Georgia or the Delmarva plants; Georgia plants have narrower leaves than the Delmarva plants as well as smaller, rounder cones and a taller, narrower growth form.

Survey Recommendations: Plants flower and develop new cones in the late summer fall. Leaves can be identified throughout the growing season and cones are present year-round. Range: Northwestern Georgia, southeastern Oklahoma, and the Delmarva Peninsula of Delaware and Maryland. Threats: Disruption of natural hydrology in springs and spring runs. Shoreline clearing and development. Ditching, draining, and filling wetlands. Polluted runoff and siltation into ponds and springs from adjacent uplands. Georgia Conservation Status: One population is known, it occurs on private land. This is the only population of Georgia alder known in the world. Conservation and Management Recommendations: Avoid ditching, draining, and otherwise altering hydrology of ponds and spring-runs. Protect ponds and spring-runs from sedimentation and pollution. Protect shorelines from development. Selected References: Chafin, L.G. 2007. Field guide to the rare plants of Georgia. State Botanical Garden of Georgia and University of Georgia Press, Athens. FNA. 1997. Flora of North America. Vol. 3, Magnoliophyta: Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Oxford University Press, New York. NatureServe. 2007. NatureServe Explorer. Arlington, Virginia. http://www.natureserve.org/explorer Schrader, J.A. and W.R. Graves. 2000. Alnus maritima: a rare woody species from the New World. New Plantsman 7:74-82. Schrader, J.A. and W.R. Graves. 2000. Seed germination and seedling growth of Alnus maritima from its three disjunct populations. Journal of American Society of Horticultural Science 125(1): 128-134. Schrader, J.A. and W.R. Graves. 2000. Timing of seed dispersal may limit the reproductive success of Alnus maritima. Castanea 65(1): 69-77. Schrader, J.A. and W.R. Graves. 2002. Infraspecific systematics of Alnus maritima from three widely disjunct populations. Castanea 67: 380-401. Stibolt, V.M. 1978. The ecology and systematics of Alnus maritima Muhl. ex Nutt. (Betulaceae). Thesis, University of Maryland, College Park. Stibolt, V.M. 1981. The distribution of Alnus maritima Muhl. ex Nutt. (Betulaceae). Castanea 46: 195-200

Stibolt, V.M., C.R. Broome and J.L. Reveal. 1977. Alnus maritima Muhl. ex Nutt., not Alnus metoporina Furlow. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 64: 373-374. Weakley, A.S. 2007. Flora of the Carolinas, Virginia, Georgia, and surrounding areas: working draft of January 2007. University of North Carolina Herbarium, Chapel Hill. Author of species account: Linda G. Chafin Date Compiled or Updated: L. Chafin, Sept. 2007: original account K. Owers, Jan. 2010: updated status and ranks, added pictures