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Published byJanel Wilkinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Winter Tree Identification
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Evergreens (Conifers) Deciduous Leaves are needles or scalelike Leaves stay on Tree year round Fruit is a cone Sap has “antifreeze” Leaves are flat with veins Leaves fall off tree in autumn Fruits vary
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How to Identify Conifers Are leaves needle or scalelike? Are needles in a bundle or do they grow singly? How many needles are in a bundle? Do leaves fall off in autumn?
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Scalelike Leaves Eastern red cedar Northern white cedar
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Eastern White Pine Jack Pine Needles in Bundles
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Single Needles Colorado blue spruce
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Alternate Leaves Opposite Leaves Leaf Arrangement in Deciduous Trees Whorled Leaves
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Trees with Opposite Leaves MAD Horse Buck (and Viburnum) Maple Ash Dogwood Horse Chestnut Buckeye Viburnum
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Trees with Alternate Leaves Everything else… Oak Beech Hickory Aspen Elm Hackberry Etc….
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Simple vs. Compound
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Twig Anatomy
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Maple (Acer sp.) Twigs/Buds Sugar Maple Silver Maple
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Maple (Acer sp.) Bark Sugar Maple Silver Maple
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Ash (Fraxinus sp.) Twigs Black Ash White Ash Green Ash
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Ash (Fraxinus sp.) Bark White Ash Green Ash
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Ohio Buckeye (Aesculus glabra) Opposite Leaf Scars Hexagonal Pith Peanut Butter Colored Large Bud Light Gray Bark
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Black Walnut (Juglans nigra) Chambered Pith Bud and Leaf Scar (Monkey Face) Fruit
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Birches (Betula sp.) Young bark of River Birch Bark of Paper Birch Mature bark of River Birch
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Hickories (Carya sp.) Shagbark Hickory Bitternut (or Yellow-bud) Hickory
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Catalpa (Catalpa speciosa) Whorled Leaf ScarsBark Fruit
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Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) Bud – Hairy Pseudoterminal Bud Angled Warty Bark in Young Trees
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American Beech (Fagus grandifolia) Smooth, Silvery Bark Spiky Fruit Bud – Long, Narrow Cigar
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Sycamore (Platanus occidentalis) Bud – One Scale Distinctive Flaky Bark Fruit
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Cottonwood (Populus deltoides) Blocky Bark Bud – Imbricate Scales, Shiny and Large
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Basswood (Tilia americana) Bud – Smiling Shark Mature Bark – Deep Fissures Young Bark – Smooth
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Black Locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) Paired Thorns on TwigBark – Deep Fissures
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Oaks (Quercus sp.) Red Oak White Oak
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Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) Young Bark (horizontal lenticels) Mature Bark
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Field Guides and Resources Trees of Wisconsin website http://www.uwgb.edu/biodiversity/herbarium/trees/tree_intro01.htm
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