British Columbia Outdoor Wilderness Guide  |
TREMBLING ASPEN
populus tremuloides
- Trembling
Aspen is also known as Quaking Aspen, Quivering Aspen,
Quaking Asp, Golden Aspen, Mountain Aspen, Trembling
Poplar, Popple
- Some
native peoples called Trembling Aspen "noisy leaf"
UNIQUE
FEATURES:
- The
leaves quiver or tremble at the slightest breeze
- Trembling
Aspen can sprout from root suckers
- Trembling
Aspen are quick growing but short lived (around 50
years)
- Trembling
Aspen provide food for the beaver, moose, elk and
deer, nesting in rotten trunks for birds
LOCATION:
- Trembling
Aspen grow throughout BC
- Trembling
Aspen appear east of the Coast Ranges
- Narrow
band along east coast of Vancouver Island
- Very
common in the northeast corner of BC
- Trembling
Aspen likes well drained, moist soils rich in calcium
SIZE:
- Trembling
Aspen grow up to 25 metres tall
FRUIT:
- tiny,
down-covered capsules, full of seeds
FLOWERS:
- male
catkins: 2 to 3 cm long female catkins: 4 to 10 cm
long female and male catkins are found on separate
trees
- appear
with or before leaves
LEAVES:
- round
to triangular shape
- pointed
tip and edges round-tipped
- stalk
is flattened so leaf can 'tremble' or move at the
slightest breeze
- smooth,
dark green with a paler underside, turns yellow in
the fall
BARK:
- smooth,
greenish white turning blackish and roughened at the
base when mature
- doesn't
peel
- black
scars show where branches once grew
- often
show scars of bears and other animals
WOOD
CHARACTERISTICS:
- soft,
brittle, not durable
USES:
- modern
- pulp, waferboard, chopsticks, early settlers derived
a quinine-like substance from the inner bark, boiled
branches made a cleanser for guns, traps and to remove
human scent from hunters
- traditional
- inner bark: food (raw or roasted); wood: tent poles,
fuels, canoes - rotten wood was used to line babies'
cradles because it was soft; bark/roots: chewed and
applied to wounds to stop the bleeding
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