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Types of Leaves. Ginkgo  Family: Ginkgoaceae  Genus: Ginkgo  Species: biloba  Scientific name: Ginkgo biloba.

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Presentation on theme: "Types of Leaves. Ginkgo  Family: Ginkgoaceae  Genus: Ginkgo  Species: biloba  Scientific name: Ginkgo biloba."— Presentation transcript:

1 Types of Leaves

2 Ginkgo  Family: Ginkgoaceae  Genus: Ginkgo  Species: biloba  Scientific name: Ginkgo biloba

3 MAPLES Family: Aceraceae Genus: Acer

4 MAPLES Seeds!!

5  Ex: Red maple: Acer rubrum Most maples have simple palmate leaves

6 Some maples have compound leaves  Box elder maple:  Acer negundo  Paper bark maple  Acer griseum  Papery bark, peels, looks like cinnamon

7 MAPLES  For species of maples and scientific names, see the tree ID list.  To identify specific species, use field guides, the internet, or talk to Mrs. McCarrey about using her book to compare leaves.

8 SYCAMORES (aka plane trees)  Family: Platanaceae  Genus: Platanus  Can be confused with maples; the difference is the sycamores don’t have the classic maple seeds and sycamores have very distinctive bark that looks like dried and cracked mud (right) or sometimes sloughs off (below)

9 OAKS  Family: Fagaceae  Genus: Quercus

10 OAKS  Seeds = acorns

11 BEECHES  Family: Fagaceae  Genus: Fagus  Typically have a smooth gray bark (like an elephant, but smoother!)  Classic beech leaves have wide-spread veins in a pinnate leaf and are pubescent on margins and bottom of leaf.

12 WILLOWS  Family: Salicaceae  Genus: Salix  Usually have narrow, pointed leaves (except for pussy willows)  Seeds: catkins (in spring)  Some “weep” (but not all – this is true of weeping willows and corkscrew willows” Above and right: catkins Left and below: leaves and tree of weeping willow

13 Cottonwoods & Poplars  Family: Salicaceae  Genus: Populus  Tall, grow by water, cottonwood seeds in spring  Deeply furrowed bark

14 ASPEN  Family: Salicaceae  Genus: Populus  Species: Populus tremuloides  Classic white bark with black lines on it; live in clumps (clonal)  Leaves: flat, soft teeth, pointed

15 Birches  Family: Betulaceae (same family as alders and hornbeams)  Genus: Betula (alder genus: alnus, hornbeam genus: Carpinus)  Serrated leaves  Usually have white bark (paper birch bark peels like paper, weeping birches have deeply serrated teeth and white bark with black lines)

16 Pine Trees  Family: Pinaceae  Genus: Pinus  Needles usually come in fascicles/bundles of 2, 3, or 5 (rarely as 1) and are usually 2” or longer  Pinecones  Needles in 2s: Austrian, Bosnian Red Cone, 2-needle pinyon, Scots/Scotch  Needles in 3s: Jeffrey and Ponderosa  Needles in 5s: Bristlecones, Limber

17 Spruces  Family: Pinaceae  Genus: Picea  Needles are shorter than pine needles; come in bundles/fascicles of 1  Pokey/sharp needles (typically stiffer than pine needles)  Blue spruce: Picea pungens

18 Cedars  Family: Pinaceae  Genus: Cedrus  More elegant appearing than pines/spruces; boughs often droop with age  Needles are whorled in clusters of at least 20

19 Firs and Douglas Firs  Family: Pinace  Genus for firs: Abies  Genus for Douglas-fir: Pseudotsuga  Fur needles are soft and not sharp; less stiff than spruces “firs are friendly!”  Fir cones are papery (douglas fir cones have little “tails” on the paper) Left: white fir cone Right: Douglas fir cone

20 Horsechestnuts/Buckeyes  Family: Sapindaceae  Genus: Aesculus  Compound palmate leaves with either 5 or 7 leaflets; seeds are spikey balls  Good shade trees

21 Elms  Family: Ulmaceae  Genus: Ulmus  These have prolific papery seeds (seeds almost look like petals)  Many species are messy (lots of sap, pollen, and seeds)  Serrated pinnate leaves with widely spread veins; leaf is asymmetrical where it comes off of the petiole

22 Linden  Family: Tiliaceae  Genus: Tilia  Key features: light serration on leaves, leaves usually asymmetrical (slightly heart shaped) where blade comes off of petiole, leaves have a petal which accompanies them and dries out/turns yellow/white as summer progresses

23 Walnut trees  Family: Juglandaceae  Genus: Juglans  In Utah there are two main types:  English walnut (Juglans regia)  Black Walnut (Juglans nigra )  Compound leaves Walnut seeds in spring/summer 

24 Fruit Trees  Family: Rosaceae  Same family as rosebushes  Many different cultivars or breeds (often people label cultivars or specific types by adding a word to the end of the scientific name, e.g. Tilia cordata greenspire, but you don’t have to identify this cultivar)

25 Hawthorn  Family: Rosaceae  Genus: Crataegus  Serrated leaves of varying shapes, small round berries that birds eat

26 Pear  Family: Rosaceae  Genus: Pyrus  Common pears are European pear Pyrus communis (has fruit) and Bradford pear (tiny non-edible fruits)

27 Apple  Family: Rosaceae  Genus: Malus  Includes crabapples (right) and apples (below)

28 Plum, cherry, apricot, peach  Family: Rosaceae  Genus: Prunus

29 Rowan  Family: Rosaceae  Genus: Rowan  In legend, rowan wood is used to ward off witches (see The Last Apprentice series).

30 Image sources  BYU TREE TOUR website http://treetour.byu.edu/map.aspxhttp://treetour.byu.edu/map.aspx  Wikimedia commons  Google images when first two sources were inadequate to portray key characteristics


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