Alaska birch (Ea) - Betula neoalaskana
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External Links Other external information on Alaska birch
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BC Distribution of Alaska birch (Ea)
| Description |
Alaska birch is usually a tall shrub, less often, a medium-sized (<20 m) deciduous broad-leaved tree, at maturity with a narrow, oval crown, slender, often curved stem, and creamy white or slightly pinkish bark.
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Geographic Range
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Geographic element: Western North American/Cordilleran and northern Central Distribution in Western North America: north and central in the Cordilleran region |
Ecological Amplitudes
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Climatic amplitude: subarctic - (subalpine boreal) - montane boreal Orographic amplitude: montane - (subalpine) Occurrence in biogeoclimatic zones: (lower SWB), BWBS Edaphic Amplitude Range of soil moisture regimes: (fresh) - moist - very moist - wet Range of soil nutrient regimes: very poor - poor - medium; oxylophyte |
| Root System Characteristics | Alaska birch, a wetland species, is shallow-rooted without a taproot. Roots are associated with ecto- and endo-mycorrhizae. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tolerances |
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| Associated tree species and successional role | Alaska birch grows scattered with other species in ombotrophic, poorly drained sites and wetlands, especially with black spruce. It is present in early seral, mid-seral, and even in late seral stages (on wet sites) of secondary succession. As a moderately shade-tolerant tree, Alaska birch maintains its presence as a variable component of open-canopy edaphic climax communities in ombotrophic wetlands. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Silvical Characteristics |
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Genetics and Notes
| Notes |
There are another three shrub birch species that occur frequently in interior British Columbia: shrub birch (Betula glandulosa Michx.), water birch (Betula occidentalis Hook.), and swamp birch (Betula pumila L.). All occur predominantly in boreal climates — shrub birch is an oxylophyte and diagnostic species for the SWB zone; water birch is a calciphyte represented mainly in subalpine boreal wetlands; and swamp birch is a component of montane boreal wetlands. Alaska birch is not considered a timber crop species, however, it is a useful component of wetland subarctic and boreal ecosystems. |