RED ALDER
alnus rubra
- The
Red Alder is also known as Western Alder,
Oregon Alder
- The
name red alder comes from the fact that the
inner bark turns orange-red when exposed to
air
UNIQUE
FEATURES:
- In
the forest, the Red Alder develops a slightly
tapered trunk with a narrow, rounded crown,
in the open it has a broad cone shape with
the crown starting near the trunk
- Red
Alder is
BC's most important hardwood
- While
all other alders are only shrubs, the red
alder is a large coastal tree
- Red
Alder puts nitrogen back into the soil
- Red
Alder is fast growing but only lives 40 to
60 years
LOCATION:
- Red
Alder is found on the entire coast of BC
- Red
Alder needs lots of sunshine
- Prefers
areas of recent disturbance
- nutrient
rich areas including floodplains, marshes
and streambanks
- Red
Alder grows under 500 ft
SIZE:
- Red
Alder is medium sized, up to 24 metres in
height
- can
be shrub-like in poor locations
FRUIT:
- small
(2 cm), woody, brown, oval shaped cones (female)
- narrow
winged seed
FLOWERS:
- long
(10 to 15 cm), drooping, reddish catkins (male)
LEAVES:
- oval
shaped, pointed tips, toothed edges
- bright
green with a greyish underside
- edges
often rolled under
BARK:
- thin,
greenish when young
- becoming
grey or whitish and slightly ridged with age
- rough
on the lower part of the trunk
- when
exposed to air, the inner bark turns reddish-orange
WOOD
CHARACTERISTICS:
USES:
- modern
- furniture, flooring, firewood
- traditional
- bark: dying basket material, fish nets,
wood, wool, feathers as well as human hair
and skin (colours ranged from black and brown
to orangey-red; inner bark sometimes used
for food; wood: carving bowls, spoons and
platters, smoking meat, firewood
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