1 / 34

Leaf Identification based on type and arrangement

Leaf Identification based on type and arrangement. At the base of a mature leaf you will find a bud, while at the base of a leaflet of a compound leaf, there are no buds. Leaf margins often are helpful in identifying trees. These margins take various shapes. PNW deciduous trees.

cartera
Télécharger la présentation

Leaf Identification based on type and arrangement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Leaf Identification based on type and arrangement

  2. At the base of a mature leaf you will find a bud, while at the base of a leaflet of a compound leaf, there are no buds. • Leaf margins often are helpful in identifying trees. These margins take various shapes

  3. PNW deciduous trees

  4. Vine Maple (Acer circinatum) • Habitat: Moist areas, generally an understory tree. • Generally 20’ tall • Leaves: simple, opposite • Fruit: samara • Bark: smooth, greenish tint

  5. Rocky Mountain Maple (Acer glabrum) • Habitat: Drier, more open sites than vine maple Leaves: simple, opposite • Generally 12’ tall • Fruit: samara • Bark: smooth, greenish tint

  6. Red Alder (Alnus rubra) • Habitat: Moist woods, stream banks, disturbed clearings at low elevations. • Leaves: simple, alternate • Fruit: small, brown woody ‘cones’

  7. Sitka Alder (Alnus Sinuata) • Habitat: Moist places from lowland to subalpine elevations. • 3’-20’ • Leaves: simple, alternate • Fruits: long cone-like • Uses: by native people and for stabilizing disturbed nutrient poor areas

  8. Quaking Aspen (Populus tremuloides) • Habitat: near streams, rivers, in meadows and in canyon rocks, where it may seem dry but is wet underground. Loves sunlight. • Bark: pale green* to white. Smooth • Leaves: simple, ‘shiver’ in the wind. White/silver undersides. Flattened petiole. • Vegetative propagation* • Flower:

  9. Black Cottonwood (populus trichocarpa) • Habitat: dry to moist, variety of soils. • Bark: dark, furrowed. • Leaves: smooth, dark green, pointed.

  10. Oregon White Oak

  11. Pacific Dogwood (Cornus nuttallii) • Habitat: Open to dense mixed forest especially along streams at low elevations • Leaves: simple, opposite • Fruit: pink red berry (flowers) • Uses: some natives used it as a laxative or to induce vomiting

  12. Larch/Tamarak (Larix lyallii) • Habitat: Subalpine or alpine areas often on north facing slopes • Leaves: soft needles • Small woody cones • Uses: waterproof quality, herbal remedies

  13. Bitter Cherry (Prunus emarginata) • Habitat: Moist forests and along streams • Up to 50’ • Leaves: Slender simple, alternate • Fruit: bright red, small berries

  14. PNW deciduous bushes

  15. Western Serviceberry, Shadbush, Saskatoon, Juneberry (Amelanchier alnifolia) • Habitat: Open hillsides to dense forests in well-drained soil from low to middle elevations • Leaves: simple, alternate • Flower: white ‘leafy’ clusters at tips of branches. • Fruit: blue-black and edible!

  16. Twinberry • Habitat: Moist forest clearings, streamside habitats, swamps and thickets from low to subalpine elevations ~6ft tall • Flowers: yellow ‘bell-like’ • Fruit: shiny black berries in pairs

  17. Indian Plum (Oemleria cerasiformis) • Habitat: Stream banks and moist to rather dry woods; low elevations (5’-12’) • Leaves: simple, alternate • Flowers: small, white, drooping • Fruit: blue-black when ripe (orange when not) fleshy, drooping. Edible!

  18. Devils Club (Oplopanax horridus) • Habitat: Moist woods, especially near streams, seepage sites, and in avalanche tracks; low to middle elevations • Sensitive to human impact. • *article*

  19. Blue elderberry • Habitat: Dry to moist, fairly open, low-elevation sites (6’-20’) • Leaves: compound, opposite • Flower: many tiny, creamy white • Fruit: clusters of blue-black small berries, edible! (low-grade toxin when raw that causes nausea in some)

  20. Red Eldererry (sambucus racemosa) • Habitat: Stream banks, swampy thickets, moist clearings and open forests; sea level to middle elevations (6’-20’) • Leaves: compound, opposite • Flower: many tiny, white, pyramid • Fruit: clusters of bright red Marginally edible.

  21. Wild Rose (Rosa) • Habitat: Moist to dry woods and shrublands from near sea level to middle elevations (2’-7’) • About half a dozen species in the PNW • Leaves: compound, alternate • Flower: pink • Fruit: red-orange ‘hip’ Edible! High in vitamin C, iron, calcium, and phosphorus.

  22. Salmonberry Rubus spectabilis • Habitat: Moist to wet places from streambanks to wooded areas from low to subalpine elevations (4’-8’) • Leaves: compound • Flower: deep showy pink, solitary • Fruit: red-salmon, raspberry-like, edible!

  23. ThimbleberryRubus parviflorus • Habitat: Moist to dry, wooded to open areas from near sea level to subalpine elevations (4’-8’) • Leaves: simple, maple-like • Flower: white in loose clusters • Fruit: red, hemispherical, edible!

  24. Smooth sumac Rhus glabra • Habitat: Dry slopes and draws in eastern Washington’s shrub-steppe; can be found along forest edges, grasslands, and roadsides • Leaves: compound, beautiful in fall • Fruit: dense clusters of ‘bobs’ • Teas, spice, dye,

More Related