Birch

Birch
Silver birch
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fagales
Family: Betulaceae
Subfamily: Betuloideae
Genus: Betula
L.
Subgenera
  • Betulenta
  • Betulaster
  • Neurobetula
  • Betula
  • Chamaebetula
Range of Betula
Synonyms[1]
  • Betulaster Spach
  • Apterocaryon Opiz
  • Chamaebetula Opiz

A birch is a thin-leaved deciduous hardwood tree of the genus Betula (/ˈbɛtjʊlə/),[2] in the family Betulaceae, which also includes alders, hazels, and hornbeams. It is closely related to the beech-oak family Fagaceae. The genus Betula contains 30 to 60 known taxa of which 11 are on the IUCN 2011 Green List of Threatened Species. They are a typically rather short-lived pioneer species widespread in the Northern Hemisphere, particularly in northern temperate and boreal climates.[3]

Description

The front and rear sides of a piece of birch bark

Birch species are generally small to medium-sized trees or shrubs, mostly of northern temperate and boreal climates. The simple leaves are alternate, singly or doubly serrate, feather-veined, petiolate and stipulate. They often appear in pairs, but these pairs are really borne on spur-like, two-leaved, lateral branchlets.[4] The fruit is a small samara, although the wings may be obscure in some species. They differ from the alders (Alnus, other genus in the family) in that the female catkins are not woody and disintegrate at maturity, falling apart to release the seeds, unlike the woody, cone-like female alder catkins.

The bark of all birches is characteristically marked with long, horizontal lenticels, and often separates into thin, papery plates, especially upon the paper birch. Its decided color gives the common names gray, white, black, silver and yellow birch to different species.

The buds form early and are full grown by midsummer, all are lateral, no terminal bud is formed; the branch is prolonged by the upper lateral bud. The wood of all the species is close-grained with satiny texture, and capable of taking a fine polish; its fuel value is fair.

Flower and fruit

The flowers are monoecious, opening with or before the leaves and borne once fully grown these leaves are usually 3–6 millimetres (0.12–0.24 in) long on three-flowered clusters in the axils of the scales of drooping or erect catkins or aments. Staminate aments are pendulous, clustered or solitary in the axils of the last leaves of the branch of the year or near the ends of the short lateral branchlets of the year. They form in early autumn and remain rigid during the winter. The scales of the staminate aments when mature are broadly ovate, rounded, yellow or orange color below the middle, dark chestnut brown at apex. Each scale bears two bractlets and three sterile flowers, each flower consisting of a sessile, membranaceous, usually two-lobed, calyx. Each calyx bears four short filaments with one-celled anthers or strictly, two filaments divided into two branches, each bearing a half-anther. Anther cells open longitudinally. The pistillate aments are erect or pendulous, solitary; terminal on the two-leaved lateral spur-like branchlets of the year. The pistillate scales are oblong-ovate, three-lobed, pale yellow green often tinged with red, becoming brown at maturity. These scales bear two or three fertile flowers, each flower consisting of a naked ovary. The ovary is compressed, two-celled, and crowned with two slender styles; the ovule is solitary. Each scale bear a single small, winged nut that is oval, with two persistent stigmas at the apex.

Taxonomy

Subdivision

Betula species are organised into five subgenera.

Birch leaves
Birches native to Europe and Asia include
  1. Betula albosinensis—Chinese red birch (northern + central China)
  2. Betula alnoides—alder-leaf birch (China, Himalayas, northern Indochina)
  3. Betula ashburneri (Bhutan, Tibet, Sichuan, Yunnan Provinces in China)
  4. Betula baschkirica (eastern European Russia)
  5. Betula bomiensis (Tibet)
  6. Betula browicziana (Turkey and Georgia)
  7. Betula calcicola (Sichuan + Yunnan Provinces in China)
  8. Betula celtiberica (Spain)
  9. Betula chichibuensis (Chichibu region of Japan)[5]
  10. Betula chinensis—Chinese dwarf birch (China, Korea)
  11. Betula coriaceifolia (Uzbekistan)
  12. Betula corylifolia (Honshu Island in Japan)
  13. Betula costata (northeastern China, Korea, Primorye region of Russia)
  14. Betula cylindrostachya (Himalayas, southern China, Myanmar)
  15. Betula dahurica (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan)
  16. Betula delavayi - (Tibet, southern China)
  17. Betula ermanii—Erman's birch (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Korea, Japan)
  18. Betula falcata (Tajikistan)
  19. Betula fargesii (Chongqing + Hubei Provinces in China)
  20. Betula fruticosa (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan)
  21. Betula globispica (Honshu Island in Japan)
  22. Betula gmelinii (Siberia, Mongolia, northeastern China, Korea, Hokkaido Island in Japan)
  23. Betula grossa—Japanese cherry birch (Japan)
  24. Betula gynoterminalis (Yunnan Province in China)
  25. Betula honanensis - (Henan Province in China)
  26. Betula humilis or Betula kamtschatica— Kamchatka birch platyphylla (northern + central Europe, Siberia, Kazakhstan, Xinjiana, Mongolia, Korea)
  27. Betula insignis - (southern China)
  28. Betula karagandensis (Kazakhstan)
  29. Betula klokovii (Ukraine)
  30. Betula kotulae (Ukraine)
  31. Betula litvinovii (Turkey, Iran, Caucasus)
  32. Betula luminifera (China)
  33. Betula maximowiczii—monarch birch (Japan, Kuril Islands)
  34. Betula medwediewii—Caucasian birch (Turkey, Iran, Caucasus)
  35. Betula megrelica (Republic of Georgia)
  36. Betula microphylla (Siberia, Mongolia, Xinjiang, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan)
  37. Betula nana—dwarf birch (northern + central Europe, Russia, Siberia, Greenland, Northwest Territories of Canada))
  38. Betula pendula—silver birch (widespread in Europe and northern Asia; Morocco; naturalized in New Zealand and scattered locations in US + Canada)
  39. Betula platyphylla (Betula pendula var. platyphylla)—Siberian silver birch (Siberia, Russian Far East, Manchuria, Korea, Japan, Alaska, western Canada)
  40. Betula potamophila (Tajikistan)
  41. Betula potaninii (southern China)
  42. Betula psammophila (Kazakhstan)
  43. Betula pubescens—downy birch, also known as white, European white or hairy birch (Europe, Siberia, Greenland, Newfoundland; naturalized in scattered locations in US)
  44. Betula raddeana (Caucasus)
  45. Betula saksarensis (Khakassiya region of Siberia)
  46. Betula saviczii (Kazakhstan)
  47. Betula schmidtii (northeastern China, Korea, Japan, Primorye region of Russia)
  48. Betula sunanensis (Gansu Province of China)
  49. Betula szechuanica (Betula pendula var. szechuanica)—Sichuan birch (Tibet, southern China)
  50. Betula tianshanica (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Xinjiang, Mongolia)
  51. Betula utilis—Himalayan birch (Afghanistan, Central Asia, China, China, Tibet, Himalayas)
  52. Betula wuyiensis (Fujian Province of China)
  53. Betula zinserlingii (Kyrgyzstan)

Note: many American texts have B. pendula and B. pubescens confused, though they are distinct species with different chromosome numbers.

Birches native to North America include
  1. Betula alleghaniensis—yellow birch (B. lutea) (eastern Canada, Great Lakes, Northeastern US, Appalachians)
  2. Betula cordifolia—mountain paper birch (eastern Canada, Great Lakes, Northeastern US)
  3. Betula glandulosa—American dwarf birch (Siberia, Mongolia, Russian Far East, Alaska, Canada, Greenland, mountains of western US and New England, Adirondacks)
  4. Betula lenta—sweet birch, cherry birch, or black birch (Quebec, Ontario, eastern US)
  5. Betula michauxii—Newfoundland dwarf birch (Newfoundland, Labrador, Quebec, Nova Scotia)
  6. Betula minor—dwarf white birch (eastern Canada, mountains of northern New England and Adirondacks)
  7. Betula nana—dwarf birch or bog birch (also in northern Europe and Asia)
  8. Betula neoalaskana— Alaska paper birch also known as Alaska Birch or Resin Birch (Alaska and northern Canada)
  9. Betula nigra—river birch or black birch (eastern US)
  10. Betula occidentalis—water birch or red birch (B. fontinalis) (Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories, western Canada, western US)
  11. Betula papyrifera—paper birch, canoe birch or American white birch (Alaska, most of Canada, northern US)
  12. Betula populifolia—gray birch (eastern Canada, northeastern US)
  13. Betula pumila—swamp birch (Alaska, Canada, northern US)
  14. Betula uber-Virginia round-leaf birch (southwestern Virginia)

Etymology

The common name birch comes from Old English birce, bierce, from Proto-Germanic *berk-jōn (cf. German Birke, West Frisian bjirk), an adjectival formation from *berkōn (cf. Dutch berk, Low German Bark, Danish birk, Norwegian bjørk), itself from the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰerHǵ- ~ bʰrHǵ-, which also gave Lithuanian béržas, Latvian Bērzs, Russian beréza, Ukrainian beréza, Albanian bredh ‘fir’, Ossetian bærz(æ), Sanskrit bhurja, Polish brzoza, Latin fraxinus ‘ash (tree)’. This root is presumably derived from *bʰreh₁ǵ- ‘to shine’, in reference to the birch's white bark. The Proto-Germanic rune berkanan is named after the birch.

The generic name betula is from Latin, which is a diminutive borrowed from Gaulish betua (cf. Old Irish bethe, Welsh bedw).

Ecology

Birch trees near stream in Hankasalmi, Finland
A stand of birch trees
Birch tree in autumn

Birches often form even-aged stands on light, well-drained, particularly acidic soils. They are regarded as pioneer species, rapidly colonising open ground especially in secondary successional sequences following a disturbance or fire. Birches are early tree species to become established in primary successions, and can become a threat to heathland if the seedlings and saplings are not suppressed by grazing or periodic burning. Birches are generally lowland species, but some species, such as Betula nana, have a montane distribution. In the British Isles, there is some difference between the environments of Betula pendula and Betula pubescens, and some hybridization, though both are "opportunists in steady-state woodland systems". Mycorrhizal fungi, including sheathing (ecto)mycorrhizas, are found in some cases to be beneficial to tree growth.[6]

Birch foliage is used as a food plant by the larvae of a large number of lepidopteran (butterflies and moths) species.

Uses

Birch plywood

Because of the hardness of birch, it is easier to shape it with power tools, as it is quite difficult to work it with hand tools.[7]

Cultivation

White-barked birches in particular are cultivated as ornamental trees, largely for their appearance in winter. The Himalayan birch, Betula utilis, especially the variety or subspecies jacquemontii, is among the most widely planted for this purpose. It has been cultivated since the 1870s, and many cultivars are available, including 'Doorenbos', 'Grayswood Ghost' and 'Silver Shadow'; 'Knightshayes' has a slightly weeping habit. Other species with ornamental white bark include Betula ermanii, Betula papyrifera, Betula pendula and Betula raddeana.[11]

Medical

Paper

A birch bark inscription excavated from Novgorod, circa 1240–1260

Wood pulp made from birch gives relatively long and slender fibres for a hardwood. The thin walls cause the fibre to collapse upon drying, giving a paper with low bulk and low opacity. The birch fibres are, however, easily fibrillated and give about 75% of the tensile strength of softwood.[14] The low opacity makes it suitable for making glassine.

In India, the birch (Sanskrit: भुर्ज, bhurja) holds great historical significance in the culture of North India, where the thin bark coming off in winter was extensively used as writing paper. Birch paper (Sanskrit: भुर्ज पत्र, bhurja patra) is exceptionally durable and was the material used for many ancient Indian texts.[15][16] The Roman period Vindolanda tablets also use birch as a material on which to write and birch bark was used widely in ancient Russia as note paper (beresta) and for decorative purposes and even making footwear.

Tonewood

Baltic birch is among the most sought-after wood in the manufacture of speaker cabinets. Birch has a natural resonance that peaks in the high and low frequencies, which are also the hardest for speakers to reproduce. This resonance compensates for the roll-off of low and high frequencies in the speakers, and evens the tone. Birch is known for having "natural EQ".

Drums are often made from birch. Prior to the 1970s, it was one of the most popular drum woods. Because of the need for greater volume and midrange clarity, drums were made almost entirely from maple until recently, when advances in live sound reinforcement and drum microphones have allowed the use of birch in high-volume situations. Birch drums have a natural boost in the high and low frequencies, which allows the drums to sound fuller.

Birch wood is sometimes used as a tonewood for semiacoustic and acoustic guitar bodies, and occasionally for solid-body guitar bodies. It is also a common material used in mallets for keyboard percussion.

Culture

Birches have spiritual importance in several religions, both modern and historical. In Celtic cultures, the birch symbolises growth, renewal, stability, initiation and adaptability because it is highly adaptive and able to sustain harsh conditions with casual indifference. Proof of this adaptability is seen in its easy and eager ability to repopulate areas damaged by forest fires or clearings. Birches are also associated with the Tír na nÓg, the land of the dead and the Sidhe, in Gaelic folklore, and as such frequently appear in Scottish, Irish, and English folksongs and ballads in association with death, or fairies, or returning from the grave. The leaves of the silver birch tree are used in the festival of St George, held in Novosej and other villages in Albania.[17]

The birch is New Hampshire's state tree and the national tree of Finland and Russia. The Ornäs birch is the national tree of Sweden. The Czech word for the month of March, Březen, is derived from the Czech word bříza meaning birch, as birch trees flower in March under local conditions. The silver birch tree is of special importance to the Swedish city of Umeå. In 1888, the Umeå city fire spread all over the city and nearly burnt it down to the ground, but some birches, supposedly, halted the spread of the fire. To protect the city against future fires, it was decided to plant silver birch trees all over the city. Umeå later adopted the unofficial name of "City of the Birches (Björkarnas stad)". Also, the ice hockey team of Umeå is called Björklöven, translated to English "The Birch Leaves".

"Swinging" birch trees was a common game for American children in the nineteenth century. American poet Lucy Larcom's "Swinging on a Birch Tree" celebrates the game.[18] The poem inspired Robert Frost, who pays homage to the act of climbing birch trees his more famous poem, "Birches".[19] Frost once told "it was almost sacrilegious climbing a birch tree till it bent, till it gave and swooped to the ground, but that's what boys did in those days".[20]

See also

References

  1. http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/synonomy.do?name_id=21065
  2. Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  3. Ashburner, K. & McAllister, H.A. (2013). The genus Betula: a taxonomic revision of birches: 1-431. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
  4. Keeler, Harriet L. (1900). Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them. New York: Charles Scriber's Sons. pp. 295–297.
  5. Kinver, Mark (30 September 2015). "UK team germinates critically endangered Japanese birch". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
  6. Birches. (A Symposium, Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh 24–26 September 1982. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 85B, 1–11, 1984.
  7. "Birch". Wood Magazine. Retrieved December 1, 2013.
  8. "Birch Tar – How to collect it". Archived from the original on February 27, 2008.
  9. Prakel, David (August 1979). "BBC's Home Service", Hi-Fi Answers, pp679 (Courtesy link)
  10. Joyce, Daniel. "Birch Seed Leaves". reapermini.com.
  11. Bartlett, Paul (2015). "White-barked birches". The Plantsman (New Series). 14 (3): 146–151.
  12. White Birch – American Cancer Society (cancer.org)
  13. William Arthur Clark (January 1, 1937). "History of Fracture Treatment Up to the Sixteenth Century". The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. Needham, MA, USA: The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, Inc. 19 (1): 61–62. Another method cited was that of splints made of birch bark soaked in water until quite soft. They were then carefully fitted to the limb and tied with bark thongs. On drying, they became stiff and firm. There is no record of the use of extension, but, nevertheless, very few crippled and deformed Indians were to be seen.
  14. Nanko, Hiroki; Button, Alan; Hillman, Dave (2005). The World of Market Pulp. USA: WOMP, LLC. pp. 192–195. ISBN 0-615-13013-5.
  15. Sanjukta Gupta, "Lakṣmī Tantra: A Pāñcarātra Text", Brill Archive, 1972, ISBN 90-04-03419-6. Snippet:... the text recommends that the bark of the Himalayan birch tree (bhurja-patra) should be used for scribbling mantras ...
  16. Amalananda Ghosh, "An Encyclopaedia of Indian Archaeology", BRILL, 1990, ISBN 90-04-09264-1. Snippet:... Bhurja-patra, the inner bark on the birch tree grown in the Himalayan region, was a very common writing material ...
  17. "Traditional celebrations in Novosej". RASP. Retrieved August 28, 2013.
  18. Pfileger, Pat. "Our Young Folks: Swinging on a Birch-Tree, by Lucy Larcom & Winslow Homer (1867)". Merry Coz.
  19. Fagan, Deirdre J. (2007). Critical Companion to Robert Frost: A Literary Reference to His Life and Work. Infobase Publishing. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-4381-0854-4. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  20. Parini, Jay (1999). Robert Frost: A Life. New York: Halt. p. 22. ISBN 0-8050-3181-2.

Sources

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