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Quaking
Aspen
Common
Name(s):
Quaking Aspen
Aspen
Quakie
Scientific
Name:
Populus
tremuloides Michx.
Scientific
Name Synonyms:
None known
Symbol:
POTR5
Description:
Life Span: Perennial
Origin:
Native
Season: Cool
Growth Characteristics:
Aspen
is an attractive deciduous tree, growing up to 40 feet tall. The
trunk is generally long and slender, but can be up to nearly 3 feet
in diameter. It flowers April to June, and fruits ripen May to July.
The tree grows rapidly from basal sprouts and root sprouts. It seldom
reproduces from seeds.
Flowers/Inflorescence:
Inflorescence
is a catkin.
Fruits/Seeds:
Fruit is tufted capsules borne in catkins. Range in color from light
green to brown. The seeds have very specific conditions needed to
germinate, and therefore, under current climatic conditions, seldom
produce aspen seedlings that survive.
Leaves: Aspen
has alternate leaves, the blades being highly variable, from oval
to broadly oval, the top of the leaf coming to a point or being
rounded, and the base being round to square. The margins are serrated,
with the teeth being mostly rounded. The upper surface of the leaf
is dark green with a prominent white midvein. The underside of the
leaf is pale green. The petiole is flattened and as long as the
leaf. This petiole allows the leaves to "quake" in the
wind, hence the name "quakie." The leaves change from
green to bright yellow or yellowish-orange in the fall.
Stems: Twigs
are slender, reddish-brown to gray. The trunk bark is thin, smooth,
and chalky white. The bark becomes darker and breaks into blocks
or plates with age or damage (i.e. fire, carving).
Ecological
Adaptations:
Quaking
aspen occurs on a wide variety of sites. It grows on moist uplands,
dry mountainsides, high plateaus, mesas, avalanche chutes, talus,
parklands, gentle slopes near valley bottoms, alluvial terraces,
and along watercourses. It is most common at elevations between
6,000 and 10,000 feet. Most of the reproduction of Aspen is by root-sprouting,
many trees in a grove being connected together by a common root
system in what are referred to as "clones." Because the
trees are in clones, they are genetically identical. This species
is not shade tolerant, and entire clones can be lost due to the
encroachment of spruce and fir into this type of ecosystem. Aspen
is dependant on fire, clear cutting, or other "clearing"
disturbance to keep stands open, free of conifers, and reproducing
from suckers.
Aspen is not tolerant of long-term flooding or waterlogged soils.
Soils: Quaking
aspen grows on soils ranging from shallow and rocky to deep loamy
sands and heavy clays. Good quaking aspen sites are usually well-drained,
loamy, and high in organic matter and nutrients.
Associated Species:
Mountian
brome, snowberry, blue wildrye,
larkspur, waterleaf, Rocky Mountain
maple, and chokecherry.
Uses and
Management:
Aspen's
main uses in Utah have been for fence poles and buildings, and as
firewood. Some trees have been sawed into lumber or pulp. Recently,
it has been used for paneling.
Aspen is good to excellent forage for sheep, and fair for cattle.
The twigs, bark, and buds are browsed by wildlife and birds eat
the seeds. Grazing of aspen sprouts, especially by cattle and elk,
is a growing concern in the maintenance of aspen stands.
Wild and domestic ungulates use quaking aspen for summer shade.
Seral quaking aspen communities provide excellent hiding cover for
moose, elk, and deer. Deer use quaking aspen stands for fawning
grounds.
Well-stocked quaking aspen stands provide excellent watershed protection.
The trees, the shrub and herbaceous understories, and the litter
of quaking aspen stands provide nearly 100 percent soil cover. Soil
cover and the intermixture of herbaceous and woody roots protect
soil except during very intense rains. Quaking aspen intercepts
less snow and transpires less water than conifers, so snowpack and
runoff is greater under quaking aspen.
Quaking aspen is valued for its aesthetic qualities at all times
of the year. The yellow, orange, and red foliage of autumn particularly
enhances recreational value of quaking aspen sites.
The bark of quaking aspen was used by pioneers and American Indians
as a fever remedy, as well as for scurvy. It contains salicin (similar
to the active ingredient in aspirin). A substance similar to turpentine
was extracted and used internally as an expectorant and externally
as a counterirritant.
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