Difference between revisions of "Populus"

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 2: 1034. 1753.

Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 456. 1754.

Etymology: Latin populus, the people, many fanciful allusions supposed but none certain
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 7. Treatment on page 5. Mentioned on page 4, 8, 9, 10, 11, 21, 25, 26, 51, 52, 67.
FNA>Volume Importer
 
FNA>Volume Importer
Line 21: Line 21:
 
}}<!--
 
}}<!--
  
--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Trees,</b> usually heterophyllous, usually clonal, clones formed by root shoots; branching usually monopodial [or sympodial]. <b>Stems</b> not spinose. <b>Buds</b> 3–10-scaled (resinous or not, terminal buds present [or absent]). <b>Leaves</b> deciduous; stipules present (caducous, usually minute, sometimes prominent on sucker shoots); petiole not glandular; (blade usually less than twice as long as wide, venation ± palmate, basal secondary veins strong, paired, except in Populus angustifolia, margins subentire or crenate, basilaminar glands 0–6). <b>Inflorescences</b> axillary or terminal, catkins, pendulous, sessile, unbranched, (leafless, flowering before leaves emerge); floral bract caducous, apex deeply or shallowly cut, (sometimes ciliate, usually glabrous, except pubescent abaxially in P. heterophylla); pistillate bract deciduous after flowering. <b>Pedicels</b> present. <b>Flowers</b>: perianth modified into non-nectariferous disc, (persistent, caducous in P. heterophylla), cup- or saucer-shaped; stamens 6–60(–70); filaments distinct; ovary 2–4-carpellate; ovules (1 or) 2–25 per ovary; styles distinct; stigmas 2–4, cylindrical to platelike, often rolled or convoluted, entire or 2-lobed. <b>Fruits</b> capsular, (2–4-valved, ovoid or spherical). <b>Seeds</b>: aril present. <b>x</b> = 19.</span><!--
+
--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Trees,</b> usually heterophyllous, usually clonal, clones formed by root shoots; branching usually monopodial [or sympodial]. <b>Stems</b> not spinose. <b>Buds</b> 3–10-scaled (resinous or not, terminal buds present [or absent]). <b>Leaves</b> deciduous; stipules present (caducous, usually minute, sometimes prominent on sucker shoots); petiole not glandular; (blade usually less than twice as long as wide, venation ± palmate, basal secondary veins strong, paired, except in <i>Populus angustifolia</i>, margins subentire or crenate, basilaminar glands 0–6). <b>Inflorescences</b> axillary or terminal, catkins, pendulous, sessile, unbranched, (leafless, flowering before leaves emerge); floral bract caducous, apex deeply or shallowly cut, (sometimes ciliate, usually glabrous, except pubescent abaxially in <i>P. heterophylla</i>); pistillate bract deciduous after flowering. <b>Pedicels</b> present. <b>Flowers</b>: perianth modified into non-nectariferous disc, (persistent, caducous in <i>P. heterophylla</i>), cup- or saucer-shaped; stamens 6–60(–70); filaments distinct; ovary 2–4-carpellate; ovules (1 or) 2–25 per ovary; styles distinct; stigmas 2–4, cylindrical to platelike, often rolled or convoluted, entire or 2-lobed. <b>Fruits</b> capsular, (2–4-valved, ovoid or spherical). <b>Seeds</b>: aril present. <b>x</b> = 19.</span><!--
  
 
-->{{Treatment/Body
 
-->{{Treatment/Body
 
|distribution=Worldwide;mostly in northern hemisphere in moist to wet habitats;Arctic Circle to s Mexico;Asia (s China;n India;s Arabian Peninsula);n Africa;outlier in Kenya.
 
|distribution=Worldwide;mostly in northern hemisphere in moist to wet habitats;Arctic Circle to s Mexico;Asia (s China;n India;s Arabian Peninsula);n Africa;outlier in Kenya.
 
|discussion=<p>Species ca. 30 (8 in the flora).</p><!--
 
|discussion=<p>Species ca. 30 (8 in the flora).</p><!--
--><p>Populus has six well-marked sections, of which four occur in the flora area: swamp poplars [sect. Leucoides Spach (P. heterophylla)]; balsam poplars [sect. Tacamahaca Spach (P. angustifolia, P. balsamifera, and P. trichocarpa)]; cottonwoods [sect. Aigeiros Duby (P. deltoides and P. fremontii)]; and aspens [sect. Populus (P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides)]. Species within a section usually have separate distributions and hybridize freely where they come in contact. Species of different sections often have overlapping ranges and do not hybridize, except that members of sect. Aigeiros hybridize with all species of both sect. Leucoides and sect. Tacamahaca with which they are sympatric (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). All known natural hybrids in the flora area are discussed under their parent species. Although some were originally described as species, they are not self-perpetuating. Because they can persist for decades by clonal growth, they can often be found in the absence of one or both parents.</p><!--
+
--><p><i>Populus</i> has six well-marked sections, of which four occur in the flora area: swamp poplars [sect. Leucoides Spach (<i>P. heterophylla</i>)]; balsam poplars [sect. Tacamahaca Spach (<i>P. angustifolia</i>, <i>P. balsamifera</i>, and <i>P. trichocarpa</i>)]; cottonwoods [sect. Aigeiros Duby (<i>P. deltoides</i> and <i>P. fremontii</i>)]; and aspens [sect. <i>Populus</i> (<i>P. grandidentata</i> and <i>P. tremuloides</i>)]. Species within a section usually have separate distributions and hybridize freely where they come in contact. Species of different sections often have overlapping ranges and do not hybridize, except that members of sect. Aigeiros hybridize with all species of both sect. Leucoides and sect. Tacamahaca with which they are sympatric (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). All known natural hybrids in the flora area are discussed under their parent species. Although some were originally described as species, they are not self-perpetuating. Because they can persist for decades by clonal growth, they can often be found in the absence of one or both parents.</p><!--
--><p>All poplars are capable of clonal expansion, producing new trees from sprouts of root systems (soboliferous habit). Different species vary greatly in their propensity for cloning. The cottonwoods, Populus deltoides and P. fremontii, rarely produce root-borne shoots under natural conditions, with most clonal suckers arising from buried branches (S. B. Rood et al. 1994); the aspens, P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides, regularly form characteristic, dome-shaped clonal groves, some hectares in extent, with thousands of individual stems (B. V. Barnes 1966). Other species fall between these extremes. As a consequence of clonal growth, whole patches of trees may be solely staminate or pistillate and have uniform leaf morphology and phenology, sometimes making it difficult to find individuals of both sexes (Barnes 1969).</p><!--
+
--><p>All poplars are capable of clonal expansion, producing new trees from sprouts of root systems (soboliferous habit). Different species vary greatly in their propensity for cloning. The cottonwoods, <i>Populus deltoides</i> and <i>P. fremontii</i>, rarely produce root-borne shoots under natural conditions, with most clonal suckers arising from buried branches (S. B. Rood et al. 1994); the aspens, <i>P. grandidentata</i> and <i>P. tremuloides</i>, regularly form characteristic, dome-shaped clonal groves, some hectares in extent, with thousands of individual stems (B. V. Barnes 1966). Other species fall between these extremes. As a consequence of clonal growth, whole patches of trees may be solely staminate or pistillate and have uniform leaf morphology and phenology, sometimes making it difficult to find individuals of both sexes (Barnes 1969).</p><!--
 
--><p>Collecting representative materials and identifying poplars is also complicated by seasonal heterophylly (variation in leaves along a shoot over the course of a growing season; W. B. Critchfield 1960; J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996). Two principal categories of leaves may differ in some characteristics, including size, shape, and marginal teeth. Preformed leaves (also known as early leaves) overwinter in buds as usually 3–10 tiny rolled up leaves before expanding with spring flush following flowering. Neoformed leaves (also known as late leaves) are initiated and expand during the growing season as shoots continue to lengthen after spring flush. Some neoformed leaves of rapidly growing suckers and young trees are the largest produced by each species, often more than twice as long as the largest leaves of mature trees. Preformed leaves are clustered at shoot bases, separated by internodes less than 1 cm. On long shoots (and all leaves on clonal sucker shoots in their first year), neoformed leaves are produced with internodes of 2 cm or more throughout the growing season until formation of winter buds, which contain next year’s preformed leaves. By the time winter buds form, most preformed leaves may already have fallen, leaving only neoformed leaves. As a result of this seasonality and unisexuality, individual staminate and pistillate trees should be marked and collected on three separate occasions: 1) at flowering; 2) when preformed leaves are mature (and when capsules are just opening on pistillate trees); and 3) with formation of mature winter buds, but before leaves have turned color and developed their abscission layer.</p><!--
 
--><p>Collecting representative materials and identifying poplars is also complicated by seasonal heterophylly (variation in leaves along a shoot over the course of a growing season; W. B. Critchfield 1960; J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996). Two principal categories of leaves may differ in some characteristics, including size, shape, and marginal teeth. Preformed leaves (also known as early leaves) overwinter in buds as usually 3–10 tiny rolled up leaves before expanding with spring flush following flowering. Neoformed leaves (also known as late leaves) are initiated and expand during the growing season as shoots continue to lengthen after spring flush. Some neoformed leaves of rapidly growing suckers and young trees are the largest produced by each species, often more than twice as long as the largest leaves of mature trees. Preformed leaves are clustered at shoot bases, separated by internodes less than 1 cm. On long shoots (and all leaves on clonal sucker shoots in their first year), neoformed leaves are produced with internodes of 2 cm or more throughout the growing season until formation of winter buds, which contain next year’s preformed leaves. By the time winter buds form, most preformed leaves may already have fallen, leaving only neoformed leaves. As a result of this seasonality and unisexuality, individual staminate and pistillate trees should be marked and collected on three separate occasions: 1) at flowering; 2) when preformed leaves are mature (and when capsules are just opening on pistillate trees); and 3) with formation of mature winter buds, but before leaves have turned color and developed their abscission layer.</p><!--
--><p>Poplar trees vary greatly in proportion of preformed and neoformed leaves during their life cycle and in how distinct these two leaf types are. Ironically, Populus heterophylla is one of the least heterophyllous species; its name alluding to variation among preformed leaves. In contrast, species with large teeth on preformed leaves, such as P. fremontii and P. grandidentata, are often strongly heterophyllous, with smaller and more numerous teeth on neoformed leaves (N. L. Britton 1886; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). The most dramatic example of heterophylly in poplars occurs in the introduced Eurasian P. alba, which has angular-ovate preformed leaves and maplelike, palmately 5-lobed neoformed leaves that are unique in the genus. In all species, teeth of neoformed leaves have larger glands at the tips than those of preformed leaves. These glands are connected to leaf venation and, in combination with basilaminar glands on the adaxial side of a leaf blade at its junction with the petiole, secrete resins onto young, expanding leaves (J. D. Curtis and N. R. Lersten 1978).</p><!--
+
--><p>Poplar trees vary greatly in proportion of preformed and neoformed leaves during their life cycle and in how distinct these two leaf types are. Ironically, <i>Populus heterophylla</i> is one of the least heterophyllous species; its name alluding to variation among preformed leaves. In contrast, species with large teeth on preformed leaves, such as <i>P. fremontii</i> and <i>P. grandidentata</i>, are often strongly heterophyllous, with smaller and more numerous teeth on neoformed leaves (N. L. Britton 1886; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). The most dramatic example of heterophylly in poplars occurs in the introduced Eurasian <i>P. alba</i>, which has angular-ovate preformed leaves and maplelike, palmately 5-lobed neoformed leaves that are unique in the genus. In all species, teeth of neoformed leaves have larger glands at the tips than those of preformed leaves. These glands are connected to leaf venation and, in combination with basilaminar glands on the adaxial side of a leaf blade at its junction with the petiole, secrete resins onto young, expanding leaves (J. D. Curtis and N. R. Lersten 1978).</p><!--
--><p>Poplars are often grown for ornament, shelterbelts, timber, pulp, and specialty wood products. Breeding of poplars, especially using interspecific crosses, has become an important source of stock for plantation forestry. Selected clones of some crosses, such as Populus ×generosa (discussed under P. trichocarpa) and P. ×canadensis (discussed under P. deltoides), are among the fastest growing and most productive temperate trees. All native species (except P. heterophylla) and some natural hybrids are cultivated to some extent within their native ranges. In addition to native poplars, some Eurasian species and hybrids are commonly cultivated and may persist and spread clonally to form prominent landscape components. Because most of these taxa are represented in North America almost entirely by single clones and are solely pistillate or staminate, they are not truly naturalized here, despite their occasional prominence in the landscape. Eurasian taxa represented exclusively by staminate individuals produce no seed, and any seeds dispersed by the taxa that are solely pistillate of necessity have arisen from pollination by related (usually native) species. The most frequently encountered cultivated Eurasian species are included in the keys and are briefly described and discussed, along with any known natural hybrids, in the discussion for the most closely related native species.</p><!--
+
--><p>Poplars are often grown for ornament, shelterbelts, timber, pulp, and specialty wood products. Breeding of poplars, especially using interspecific crosses, has become an important source of stock for plantation forestry. Selected clones of some crosses, such as <i>Populus</i> ×generosa (discussed under <i>P. trichocarpa</i>) and P. ×canadensis (discussed under <i>P. deltoides</i>), are among the fastest growing and most productive temperate trees. All native species (except <i>P. heterophylla</i>) and some natural hybrids are cultivated to some extent within their native ranges. In addition to native poplars, some Eurasian species and hybrids are commonly cultivated and may persist and spread clonally to form prominent landscape components. Because most of these taxa are represented in North America almost entirely by single clones and are solely pistillate or staminate, they are not truly naturalized here, despite their occasional prominence in the landscape. Eurasian taxa represented exclusively by staminate individuals produce no seed, and any seeds dispersed by the taxa that are solely pistillate of necessity have arisen from pollination by related (usually native) species. The most frequently encountered cultivated Eurasian species are included in the keys and are briefly described and discussed, along with any known natural hybrids, in the discussion for the most closely related native species.</p><!--
--><p>Publication of the complete draft sequence of the Populus trichocarpa genome (G. A. Tuskan et al. 2006) has helped consolidate the position of Populus among the elite ranks of “model” organisms used for genetic, evolutionary, developmental, physiological, plant pathological, and herbivory related studies, among others. The published genome sequence may also lead to improved understanding of relationships within the genus but has not yet influenced molecular phylogenetic studies, which have suffered from limited sampling, although some interesting insights on wider past hybridization, than any seen today, have emerged (R. L. Smith and K. J. Sytsma 1990).</p><!--
+
--><p>Publication of the complete draft sequence of the <i>Populus trichocarpa</i> genome (G. A. Tuskan et al. 2006) has helped consolidate the position of <i>Populus</i> among the elite ranks of “model” organisms used for genetic, evolutionary, developmental, physiological, plant pathological, and herbivory related studies, among others. The published genome sequence may also lead to improved understanding of relationships within the genus but has not yet influenced molecular phylogenetic studies, which have suffered from limited sampling, although some interesting insights on wider past hybridization, than any seen today, have emerged (R. L. Smith and K. J. Sytsma 1990).</p><!--
--><p>When A. Cronquist (1968, 1981) formulated the classification used in much of this flora, treating Salicaceae in a monotypic Salicales associated with Violales, it was already strongly suspected, based on floral development, leaf architecture, and shared secondary metabolites, that Populus and Salix were derived from within the predominantly tropical family Flacourtiaceae, as traditionally circumscribed (A. D. J. Meeuse 1975; W. S. Judd et al. 1994; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). There are strong similarities between Populus and the monotypic eastern Asian genera Idesia, Itoa, and Poliothyrsis, and also with the more widespread Xylosma, found in all tropical regions except Africa, all are members of tribe Flacourtieae in traditional circumscriptions (D. E. Lemke 1988; D. J. Mabberly 1997). Molecular studies have amply confirmed these relationships and greatly extended them in showing that these and other flacourt genera are more closely related to Populus and Salix than they are to many other genera within traditional Flacourtiaceae (M. W. Chase et al. 2002). In fact, Flacourtiaceae are so heterogeneous that the family has been split into two, about half of the tribes being aligned with Populus and Salix in an enlarged Salicaceae (the earlier name, even though Flacourtia itself is included in the family). Chase et al. restricted tribe Saliceae to Populus and Salix, but their tribe Flacourtieae is paraphyletic and some of its genera (including Itoa and Poliothyrsis) will have to be transferred to Saliceae to establish consistent monophyly of groups within the family. Populus and Salix are sister taxa within this tribe but, of the two genera, some poplar species have retained more plesiomorphic features than have any of the willows, including more stamens and carpels, a less modified perianth, and broader leaves with more complex venation. Most of these species, belonging to two generally more southerly sections not found in the flora (sect. Abaso, with P. mexicana, and sect. Turanga, with P. euphratica, P. ilicifolia, and P. pruinosa), have strongly heteroblastic developmental leaf change, in which broad adult leaves expected through familiarity with the common temperate representatives of the genus, including all species in the flora except P. angustifolia, are preceded by willowlike, narrow, seedling and juvenile leaves (Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996b).</p><!--
+
--><p>When A. Cronquist (1968, 1981) formulated the classification used in much of this flora, treating Salicaceae in a monotypic Salicales associated with Violales, it was already strongly suspected, based on floral development, leaf architecture, and shared secondary metabolites, that <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> were derived from within the predominantly tropical family Flacourtiaceae, as traditionally circumscribed (A. D. J. Meeuse 1975; W. S. Judd et al. 1994; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). There are strong similarities between <i>Populus</i> and the monotypic eastern Asian genera Idesia, Itoa, and Poliothyrsis, and also with the more widespread <i>Xylosma</i>, found in all tropical regions except Africa, all are members of tribe Flacourtieae in traditional circumscriptions (D. E. Lemke 1988; D. J. Mabberly 1997). Molecular studies have amply confirmed these relationships and greatly extended them in showing that these and other flacourt genera are more closely related to <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> than they are to many other genera within traditional Flacourtiaceae (M. W. Chase et al. 2002). In fact, Flacourtiaceae are so heterogeneous that the family has been split into two, about half of the tribes being aligned with <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> in an enlarged Salicaceae (the earlier name, even though <i>Flacourtia</i> itself is included in the family). Chase et al. restricted tribe Saliceae to <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i>, but their tribe Flacourtieae is paraphyletic and some of its genera (including Itoa and Poliothyrsis) will have to be transferred to Saliceae to establish consistent monophyly of groups within the family. <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> are sister taxa within this tribe but, of the two genera, some poplar species have retained more plesiomorphic features than have any of the willows, including more stamens and carpels, a less modified perianth, and broader leaves with more complex venation. Most of these species, belonging to two generally more southerly sections not found in the flora (sect. Abaso, with <i>P. mexicana</i>, and sect. Turanga, with P. euphratica, <i>P. ilicifolia</i>, and <i>P. pruinosa</i>), have strongly heteroblastic developmental leaf change, in which broad adult leaves expected through familiarity with the common temperate representatives of the genus, including all species in the flora except <i>P. angustifolia</i>, are preceded by willowlike, narrow, seedling and juvenile leaves (Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996b).</p><!--
--><p>The earliest known fossil poplars, found in latest Paleocene and Eocene sediments within the flora area, are assigned to sect. Abaso and run the full gamut of leaf widths, some seemingly heteroblastic and others with narrow, fully adult leaves (J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c; S. R. Manchester et al. 2006). The common ancestor of Populus and Salix was probably somewhat more similar to Populus than to Salix, and this is partially corroborated by the recently described Eocene genus Pseudosalix (L. D. Boucher et al. 2003). Based on its morphology, this plant is the closest known relative of Populus and Salix and co-occurs with both genera in the Green River Formation of Utah and Colorado, so it is too late to represent their common ancestor. Nonetheless, its features are reasonably intermediate between traditional Salicaceae and their newly accepted relatives among extant traditional Flacourtiaceae. Populus strongly supports the concept of an enlarged Salicaceae and equally so an enlarged tribe Saliceae that would include some genera retained by M. W. Chase et al. (2002) in tribe Flacourtieae against their own evidence, which, admittedly, did not contain all relevant genera. The botanical community already recognizes a different set of family relationships than presented in the Flora of North America North of Mexico.</p><!--
+
--><p>The earliest known fossil poplars, found in latest Paleocene and Eocene sediments within the flora area, are assigned to sect. Abaso and run the full gamut of leaf widths, some seemingly heteroblastic and others with narrow, fully adult leaves (J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c; S. R. Manchester et al. 2006). The common ancestor of <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> was probably somewhat more similar to <i>Populus</i> than to <i>Salix</i>, and this is partially corroborated by the recently described Eocene genus Pseudosalix (L. D. Boucher et al. 2003). Based on its morphology, this plant is the closest known relative of <i>Populus</i> and <i>Salix</i> and co-occurs with both genera in the Green River Formation of Utah and Colorado, so it is too late to represent their common ancestor. Nonetheless, its features are reasonably intermediate between traditional Salicaceae and their newly accepted relatives among extant traditional Flacourtiaceae. <i>Populus</i> strongly supports the concept of an enlarged Salicaceae and equally so an enlarged tribe Saliceae that would include some genera retained by M. W. Chase et al. (2002) in tribe Flacourtieae against their own evidence, which, admittedly, did not contain all relevant genera. The botanical community already recognizes a different set of family relationships than presented in the Flora of North America North of Mexico.</p><!--
--><p>Keys. Three different keys are provided here to permit more effective identification throughout the annual phenological cycle in Populus: a key to flowering specimens that may also be used (but not optimally) for leafless, winter dormant specimens; a key to fruiting specimens; and a key to specimens with mature leaves.</p><!--
+
--><p>Keys. Three different keys are provided here to permit more effective identification throughout the annual phenological cycle in <i>Populus</i>: a key to flowering specimens that may also be used (but not optimally) for leafless, winter dormant specimens; a key to fruiting specimens; and a key to specimens with mature leaves.</p><!--
--><p>Flowering in early spring is short-lived in poplars, with abscission of staminate catkins and pistillate floral bracts, and shrivelling of stigmas all occurring before emergence of the leaves, much as in precocious Salix species (in which bracts are not caducous). During anthesis, some winter characters involving twig colors and textures, leaf scars, and features of buds generally remain intact, so such features are used as supplementary characters in the key to flowering specimens. Characters of flower buds can also be helpful in winter identification but they are absent or obscured with emergence of the inflorescences at anthesis and are omitted from this key. The key includes characters of both staminate and pistillate individuals, which generally do not occur together on a single specimen. The characters of those rare individuals with mixed catkins or hermaphroditic flowers may be anomalous in other ways as well, and such individuals may not be readily identifiable.</p><!--
+
--><p>Flowering in early spring is short-lived in poplars, with abscission of staminate catkins and pistillate floral bracts, and shrivelling of stigmas all occurring before emergence of the leaves, much as in precocious <i>Salix</i> species (in which bracts are not caducous). During anthesis, some winter characters involving twig colors and textures, leaf scars, and features of buds generally remain intact, so such features are used as supplementary characters in the key to flowering specimens. Characters of flower buds can also be helpful in winter identification but they are absent or obscured with emergence of the inflorescences at anthesis and are omitted from this key. The key includes characters of both staminate and pistillate individuals, which generally do not occur together on a single specimen. The characters of those rare individuals with mixed catkins or hermaphroditic flowers may be anomalous in other ways as well, and such individuals may not be readily identifiable.</p><!--
--><p>At the time of fruit maturation, in late spring to early summer, staminate individuals are not distinguishable from non-fruiting pistillate individuals. Furthermore, while preformed leaves may then be expanded enough to reveal their mature characteristics, there may well not yet be any neoformed leaves present. Because the time of fruit maturation is not optimal for identifying non-fruiting individuals of Populus by their vegetative characters, the key to leafy specimens is designed primarily for late summer use, after the seeds and fruiting catkins have been shed. Because trees of the commonly cultivated, introduced P. nigra, P. simonii, and P. ×canadensis are rarely anything but staminate in North America (except in arboreta, botanical gardens, or poplar plantations), these taxa are excluded from the fruiting key.</p><!--
+
--><p>At the time of fruit maturation, in late spring to early summer, staminate individuals are not distinguishable from non-fruiting pistillate individuals. Furthermore, while preformed leaves may then be expanded enough to reveal their mature characteristics, there may well not yet be any neoformed leaves present. Because the time of fruit maturation is not optimal for identifying non-fruiting individuals of <i>Populus</i> by their vegetative characters, the key to leafy specimens is designed primarily for late summer use, after the seeds and fruiting catkins have been shed. Because trees of the commonly cultivated, introduced <i>P. nigra</i>, P. simonii, and P. ×canadensis are rarely anything but staminate in North America (except in arboreta, botanical gardens, or poplar plantations), these taxa are excluded from the fruiting key.</p><!--
 
--><p>Leafy specimens are best identified in late summer or early autumn when winter buds are forming and neoformed leaves are present and preformed leaves have not yet been shed. The key to leafy specimens is most effective at this time but should prove useful whenever mature, or nearly mature, leaves are present.</p><!--
 
--><p>Leafy specimens are best identified in late summer or early autumn when winter buds are forming and neoformed leaves are present and preformed leaves have not yet been shed. The key to leafy specimens is most effective at this time but should prove useful whenever mature, or nearly mature, leaves are present.</p><!--
--><p>Three commonly encountered introduced Eurasian species (Populus alba, P. nigra, and P. simonii) are included in the keys but are not given full treatments in the text, where they are discussed following the most closely related native species. Other, less common, introduced species that are only found clearly under cultivation are omitted from the keys as are the relatively numerous different hybrid combinations (except for three introduced hybrids that have much the same status as the prominent introduced species: P. ×canadensis ‘Eugenei,’ P. ×canescens, and P. ×jackii ‘Balm of Gilead’). There are more different natural hybrid poplar combinations in the flora than there are poplar species. Although these hybrids can be found across the continent, they are usually much less common than their parents and typically grow with both, which gives a clue to their identity. The natural hybrids are not included in the keys because their numbers, additional variability, and general intermediacy between the parent species would greatly reduce ease of use of the keys and confidence in identification for the sake of relatively few specimens. Instead, hybrids are discussed following the descriptions of their parent species. A specimen that does not quite key out in the appropriate seasonal key here may well be a hybrid and the discussion of the species it comes closest to should be consulted for distinguishing characteristics. Overlapping parental distributions are also helpful, although, on rare occasions, hybrids may be found far beyond the natural range of one (or both) of their parent species.</p>
+
--><p>Three commonly encountered introduced Eurasian species (<i>Populus</i> alba, <i>P. nigra</i>, and P. simonii) are included in the keys but are not given full treatments in the text, where they are discussed following the most closely related native species. Other, less common, introduced species that are only found clearly under cultivation are omitted from the keys as are the relatively numerous different hybrid combinations (except for three introduced hybrids that have much the same status as the prominent introduced species: P. ×canadensis ‘Eugenei,’ P. ×canescens, and P. ×jackii ‘Balm of Gilead’). There are more different natural hybrid poplar combinations in the flora than there are poplar species. Although these hybrids can be found across the continent, they are usually much less common than their parents and typically grow with both, which gives a clue to their identity. The natural hybrids are not included in the keys because their numbers, additional variability, and general intermediacy between the parent species would greatly reduce ease of use of the keys and confidence in identification for the sake of relatively few specimens. Instead, hybrids are discussed following the descriptions of their parent species. A specimen that does not quite key out in the appropriate seasonal key here may well be a hybrid and the discussion of the species it comes closest to should be consulted for distinguishing characteristics. Overlapping parental distributions are also helpful, although, on rare occasions, hybrids may be found far beyond the natural range of one (or both) of their parent species.</p>
 
|tables=
 
|tables=
 
|references={{Treatment/Reference
 
|references={{Treatment/Reference
Line 383: Line 383:
 
|publication year=1753;1754
 
|publication year=1753;1754
 
|special status=
 
|special status=
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/9216fc802291cd3df363fd52122300479582ede7/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V7/V7_2.xml
+
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/8f726806613d60c220dc4493de13607dd3150896/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V7/V7_2.xml
 
|genus=Populus
 
|genus=Populus
 
}}<!--
 
}}<!--
  
 
-->[[Category:Treatment]][[Category:Salicaceae]]
 
-->[[Category:Treatment]][[Category:Salicaceae]]

Revision as of 17:56, 18 September 2019

Trees, usually heterophyllous, usually clonal, clones formed by root shoots; branching usually monopodial [or sympodial]. Stems not spinose. Buds 3–10-scaled (resinous or not, terminal buds present [or absent]). Leaves deciduous; stipules present (caducous, usually minute, sometimes prominent on sucker shoots); petiole not glandular; (blade usually less than twice as long as wide, venation ± palmate, basal secondary veins strong, paired, except in Populus angustifolia, margins subentire or crenate, basilaminar glands 0–6). Inflorescences axillary or terminal, catkins, pendulous, sessile, unbranched, (leafless, flowering before leaves emerge); floral bract caducous, apex deeply or shallowly cut, (sometimes ciliate, usually glabrous, except pubescent abaxially in P. heterophylla); pistillate bract deciduous after flowering. Pedicels present. Flowers: perianth modified into non-nectariferous disc, (persistent, caducous in P. heterophylla), cup- or saucer-shaped; stamens 6–60(–70); filaments distinct; ovary 2–4-carpellate; ovules (1 or) 2–25 per ovary; styles distinct; stigmas 2–4, cylindrical to platelike, often rolled or convoluted, entire or 2-lobed. Fruits capsular, (2–4-valved, ovoid or spherical). Seeds: aril present. x = 19.

Distribution

Worldwide, mostly in northern hemisphere in moist to wet habitats, Arctic Circle to s Mexico, Asia (s China, n India, s Arabian Peninsula), n Africa, outlier in Kenya.

Discussion

Species ca. 30 (8 in the flora).

Populus has six well-marked sections, of which four occur in the flora area: swamp poplars [sect. Leucoides Spach (P. heterophylla)]; balsam poplars [sect. Tacamahaca Spach (P. angustifolia, P. balsamifera, and P. trichocarpa)]; cottonwoods [sect. Aigeiros Duby (P. deltoides and P. fremontii)]; and aspens [sect. Populus (P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides)]. Species within a section usually have separate distributions and hybridize freely where they come in contact. Species of different sections often have overlapping ranges and do not hybridize, except that members of sect. Aigeiros hybridize with all species of both sect. Leucoides and sect. Tacamahaca with which they are sympatric (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). All known natural hybrids in the flora area are discussed under their parent species. Although some were originally described as species, they are not self-perpetuating. Because they can persist for decades by clonal growth, they can often be found in the absence of one or both parents.

All poplars are capable of clonal expansion, producing new trees from sprouts of root systems (soboliferous habit). Different species vary greatly in their propensity for cloning. The cottonwoods, Populus deltoides and P. fremontii, rarely produce root-borne shoots under natural conditions, with most clonal suckers arising from buried branches (S. B. Rood et al. 1994); the aspens, P. grandidentata and P. tremuloides, regularly form characteristic, dome-shaped clonal groves, some hectares in extent, with thousands of individual stems (B. V. Barnes 1966). Other species fall between these extremes. As a consequence of clonal growth, whole patches of trees may be solely staminate or pistillate and have uniform leaf morphology and phenology, sometimes making it difficult to find individuals of both sexes (Barnes 1969).

Collecting representative materials and identifying poplars is also complicated by seasonal heterophylly (variation in leaves along a shoot over the course of a growing season; W. B. Critchfield 1960; J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996). Two principal categories of leaves may differ in some characteristics, including size, shape, and marginal teeth. Preformed leaves (also known as early leaves) overwinter in buds as usually 3–10 tiny rolled up leaves before expanding with spring flush following flowering. Neoformed leaves (also known as late leaves) are initiated and expand during the growing season as shoots continue to lengthen after spring flush. Some neoformed leaves of rapidly growing suckers and young trees are the largest produced by each species, often more than twice as long as the largest leaves of mature trees. Preformed leaves are clustered at shoot bases, separated by internodes less than 1 cm. On long shoots (and all leaves on clonal sucker shoots in their first year), neoformed leaves are produced with internodes of 2 cm or more throughout the growing season until formation of winter buds, which contain next year’s preformed leaves. By the time winter buds form, most preformed leaves may already have fallen, leaving only neoformed leaves. As a result of this seasonality and unisexuality, individual staminate and pistillate trees should be marked and collected on three separate occasions: 1) at flowering; 2) when preformed leaves are mature (and when capsules are just opening on pistillate trees); and 3) with formation of mature winter buds, but before leaves have turned color and developed their abscission layer.

Poplar trees vary greatly in proportion of preformed and neoformed leaves during their life cycle and in how distinct these two leaf types are. Ironically, Populus heterophylla is one of the least heterophyllous species; its name alluding to variation among preformed leaves. In contrast, species with large teeth on preformed leaves, such as P. fremontii and P. grandidentata, are often strongly heterophyllous, with smaller and more numerous teeth on neoformed leaves (N. L. Britton 1886; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). The most dramatic example of heterophylly in poplars occurs in the introduced Eurasian P. alba, which has angular-ovate preformed leaves and maplelike, palmately 5-lobed neoformed leaves that are unique in the genus. In all species, teeth of neoformed leaves have larger glands at the tips than those of preformed leaves. These glands are connected to leaf venation and, in combination with basilaminar glands on the adaxial side of a leaf blade at its junction with the petiole, secrete resins onto young, expanding leaves (J. D. Curtis and N. R. Lersten 1978).

Poplars are often grown for ornament, shelterbelts, timber, pulp, and specialty wood products. Breeding of poplars, especially using interspecific crosses, has become an important source of stock for plantation forestry. Selected clones of some crosses, such as Populus ×generosa (discussed under P. trichocarpa) and P. ×canadensis (discussed under P. deltoides), are among the fastest growing and most productive temperate trees. All native species (except P. heterophylla) and some natural hybrids are cultivated to some extent within their native ranges. In addition to native poplars, some Eurasian species and hybrids are commonly cultivated and may persist and spread clonally to form prominent landscape components. Because most of these taxa are represented in North America almost entirely by single clones and are solely pistillate or staminate, they are not truly naturalized here, despite their occasional prominence in the landscape. Eurasian taxa represented exclusively by staminate individuals produce no seed, and any seeds dispersed by the taxa that are solely pistillate of necessity have arisen from pollination by related (usually native) species. The most frequently encountered cultivated Eurasian species are included in the keys and are briefly described and discussed, along with any known natural hybrids, in the discussion for the most closely related native species.

Publication of the complete draft sequence of the Populus trichocarpa genome (G. A. Tuskan et al. 2006) has helped consolidate the position of Populus among the elite ranks of “model” organisms used for genetic, evolutionary, developmental, physiological, plant pathological, and herbivory related studies, among others. The published genome sequence may also lead to improved understanding of relationships within the genus but has not yet influenced molecular phylogenetic studies, which have suffered from limited sampling, although some interesting insights on wider past hybridization, than any seen today, have emerged (R. L. Smith and K. J. Sytsma 1990).

When A. Cronquist (1968, 1981) formulated the classification used in much of this flora, treating Salicaceae in a monotypic Salicales associated with Violales, it was already strongly suspected, based on floral development, leaf architecture, and shared secondary metabolites, that Populus and Salix were derived from within the predominantly tropical family Flacourtiaceae, as traditionally circumscribed (A. D. J. Meeuse 1975; W. S. Judd et al. 1994; J. E. Eckenwalder 1996). There are strong similarities between Populus and the monotypic eastern Asian genera Idesia, Itoa, and Poliothyrsis, and also with the more widespread Xylosma, found in all tropical regions except Africa, all are members of tribe Flacourtieae in traditional circumscriptions (D. E. Lemke 1988; D. J. Mabberly 1997). Molecular studies have amply confirmed these relationships and greatly extended them in showing that these and other flacourt genera are more closely related to Populus and Salix than they are to many other genera within traditional Flacourtiaceae (M. W. Chase et al. 2002). In fact, Flacourtiaceae are so heterogeneous that the family has been split into two, about half of the tribes being aligned with Populus and Salix in an enlarged Salicaceae (the earlier name, even though Flacourtia itself is included in the family). Chase et al. restricted tribe Saliceae to Populus and Salix, but their tribe Flacourtieae is paraphyletic and some of its genera (including Itoa and Poliothyrsis) will have to be transferred to Saliceae to establish consistent monophyly of groups within the family. Populus and Salix are sister taxa within this tribe but, of the two genera, some poplar species have retained more plesiomorphic features than have any of the willows, including more stamens and carpels, a less modified perianth, and broader leaves with more complex venation. Most of these species, belonging to two generally more southerly sections not found in the flora (sect. Abaso, with P. mexicana, and sect. Turanga, with P. euphratica, P. ilicifolia, and P. pruinosa), have strongly heteroblastic developmental leaf change, in which broad adult leaves expected through familiarity with the common temperate representatives of the genus, including all species in the flora except P. angustifolia, are preceded by willowlike, narrow, seedling and juvenile leaves (Eckenwalder 1980c, 1996b).

The earliest known fossil poplars, found in latest Paleocene and Eocene sediments within the flora area, are assigned to sect. Abaso and run the full gamut of leaf widths, some seemingly heteroblastic and others with narrow, fully adult leaves (J. E. Eckenwalder 1980c; S. R. Manchester et al. 2006). The common ancestor of Populus and Salix was probably somewhat more similar to Populus than to Salix, and this is partially corroborated by the recently described Eocene genus Pseudosalix (L. D. Boucher et al. 2003). Based on its morphology, this plant is the closest known relative of Populus and Salix and co-occurs with both genera in the Green River Formation of Utah and Colorado, so it is too late to represent their common ancestor. Nonetheless, its features are reasonably intermediate between traditional Salicaceae and their newly accepted relatives among extant traditional Flacourtiaceae. Populus strongly supports the concept of an enlarged Salicaceae and equally so an enlarged tribe Saliceae that would include some genera retained by M. W. Chase et al. (2002) in tribe Flacourtieae against their own evidence, which, admittedly, did not contain all relevant genera. The botanical community already recognizes a different set of family relationships than presented in the Flora of North America North of Mexico.

Keys. Three different keys are provided here to permit more effective identification throughout the annual phenological cycle in Populus: a key to flowering specimens that may also be used (but not optimally) for leafless, winter dormant specimens; a key to fruiting specimens; and a key to specimens with mature leaves.

Flowering in early spring is short-lived in poplars, with abscission of staminate catkins and pistillate floral bracts, and shrivelling of stigmas all occurring before emergence of the leaves, much as in precocious Salix species (in which bracts are not caducous). During anthesis, some winter characters involving twig colors and textures, leaf scars, and features of buds generally remain intact, so such features are used as supplementary characters in the key to flowering specimens. Characters of flower buds can also be helpful in winter identification but they are absent or obscured with emergence of the inflorescences at anthesis and are omitted from this key. The key includes characters of both staminate and pistillate individuals, which generally do not occur together on a single specimen. The characters of those rare individuals with mixed catkins or hermaphroditic flowers may be anomalous in other ways as well, and such individuals may not be readily identifiable.

At the time of fruit maturation, in late spring to early summer, staminate individuals are not distinguishable from non-fruiting pistillate individuals. Furthermore, while preformed leaves may then be expanded enough to reveal their mature characteristics, there may well not yet be any neoformed leaves present. Because the time of fruit maturation is not optimal for identifying non-fruiting individuals of Populus by their vegetative characters, the key to leafy specimens is designed primarily for late summer use, after the seeds and fruiting catkins have been shed. Because trees of the commonly cultivated, introduced P. nigra, P. simonii, and P. ×canadensis are rarely anything but staminate in North America (except in arboreta, botanical gardens, or poplar plantations), these taxa are excluded from the fruiting key.

Leafy specimens are best identified in late summer or early autumn when winter buds are forming and neoformed leaves are present and preformed leaves have not yet been shed. The key to leafy specimens is most effective at this time but should prove useful whenever mature, or nearly mature, leaves are present.

Three commonly encountered introduced Eurasian species (Populus alba, P. nigra, and P. simonii) are included in the keys but are not given full treatments in the text, where they are discussed following the most closely related native species. Other, less common, introduced species that are only found clearly under cultivation are omitted from the keys as are the relatively numerous different hybrid combinations (except for three introduced hybrids that have much the same status as the prominent introduced species: P. ×canadensis ‘Eugenei,’ P. ×canescens, and P. ×jackii ‘Balm of Gilead’). There are more different natural hybrid poplar combinations in the flora than there are poplar species. Although these hybrids can be found across the continent, they are usually much less common than their parents and typically grow with both, which gives a clue to their identity. The natural hybrids are not included in the keys because their numbers, additional variability, and general intermediacy between the parent species would greatly reduce ease of use of the keys and confidence in identification for the sake of relatively few specimens. Instead, hybrids are discussed following the descriptions of their parent species. A specimen that does not quite key out in the appropriate seasonal key here may well be a hybrid and the discussion of the species it comes closest to should be consulted for distinguishing characteristics. Overlapping parental distributions are also helpful, although, on rare occasions, hybrids may be found far beyond the natural range of one (or both) of their parent species.

Keys

Key to flowering specimens of Populus

1 Floral bracts ciliate; stamens 6-12; flower discs narrowly cup-shaped, oblique; stigmas 2, filiform; capsules narrowly ovoid to lanceoloid; winter buds not or slightly resinous > 2
1 Floral bracts not ciliate; stamens 10-60(-70); flower discs broadly cup- or saucer-shaped, not oblique; stigmas 2-4, not filiform; capsules ovoid to spherical; winter buds resinous or not > 5
2 Branchlets and terminal buds densely to sparsely tomentose; floral bracts: apex shallowly cut > 3
2 Branchlets and terminal buds glabrous or pubescent; floral bracts: apex deeply cut > 4
3 Hairs bright white Populus alba
3 Hairs grayish, brownish, or dirty white ×canescens
4 Winter buds pubescent proximally (dull); catkins (4-)6-10 cm; flowers: discs shallowly toothed. Populus grandidentata
4 Winter buds glabrous proximally (shiny); catkins (1.7-)4-7 cm; flowers: discs entire. Populus tremuloides
5 Floral bracts pubescent abaxially; anthers apiculate; catkins 10-15(-45)-flowered; flowers: discs toothed (caducous); winter buds slightly resinous. Populus heterophylla
5 Floral bracts glabrous abaxially; anthers usually truncate; catkins (3-)15-150(-175)-flowered; flowers: discs entire; winter buds resinous throughout or partly > 6
6 Winter buds with yellow resin > 7
6 Winter buds with red resin > 8
7 Stamens 30-40(-55); pedicels 1-10(-17 in fruit) mm; ovaries ovoid, discs saucer-shaped, 1-3(-4) mm diam.; branchlets usually glabrous or thinly long- hairy. Populus deltoides
7 Stamens (30-)40-60(-70); pedicels 1-4(-5.5 in fruit) mm; ovaries spherical, discs cup-shaped, (2.5-)4-7(-9) mm diam.; branchlets glabrous, glabrate, or hairy. Populus fremontii
8 Ovaries usually 3- or 4-carpelled; stamens 30+ > 9
8 Ovaries usually 2-carpelled; stamens 10-30 > 10
9 Ovaries spherical, hairy to glabrate; discs 4-6 mm diam.; plants pistillate or staminate (dioecious). Populus trichocarpa
9 Ovaries broadly ovoid, glabrous; discs 1-3.5 mm diam.; plants pistillate ×jackii
10 Terminal buds (3-)6-9(-13) mm; branchlets round or 5-angled, whitish tan by third year; catkins 3-8 cm > 11
10 Terminal buds usually (8-)12-16(-20) mm; branchlets usually round, tan or gray by third year; catkins (4-)7-15 cm > 12
11 Stamens 10-20; plants staminate or pistillate (dioecious). Populus angustifolia
11 Stamens usually fewer than 12; plants staminate Populus simonii
12 Branchlets grayish brown by third year, first year reddish brown; resin of winter buds red, fragrant (balsamic); plants staminate or pistillate (dioecious). Populus balsamifera
12 Branchlets tan by third year, first year bright orange-brown to reddish brown; resin of winter buds orange-red, fragrant (not balsamic); plants staminate only > 13
13 Stamens 12-20(-30); first year branchlets reddish brown; habit fastigiate, branchlets parallel or nearly so Populus nigra
13 Stamens (15-)20-30; first year branchlets orange-brown; habit somewhat spreading, branchlets divergent ×canadensis

Key to fruiting specimens of Populus

1 Capsules usually 2-valved > 2
1 Capsules usually 3- or 4-valved > 7
2 Capsules ovoid to spherical, 3-8 mm > 3
2 Capsules lanceoloid or narrowly ovoid, 2-5(-7) mm > 4
3 Capsules (3-)5-8 mm; seeds 15-22 per placenta; petioles (0.2-)1.5-5 cm. Populus balsamifera
3 Capsules 3-5 mm; seeds (2-)4-7(-9) per placenta; petioles 0.2-0.8(-1.7) cm. Populus angustifolia
4 Seeds (1 or) 2 (or 3) per placenta; floral bracts densely tomentose Populus alba
4 Seeds (3-)5-8 (or 9) per placenta; floral bracts glabrous or tomentose > 5
5 Leaf blades: abaxial surface tomentose at emergence ×canescens
5 Leaf blades: abaxial surface glabrous or densely silky at emergence > 6
6 Discs shallowly toothed; catkins (4-)6-10(-14 in fruit) cm; preformed blades densely silky at emergence, with (1-)5-12(-16) teeth on each side. Populus grandidentata
6 Discs entire; catkins 4-7(-12.5 in fruit) cm; preformed blades glabrous or sparsely sericeous at emergence, with (12-)18-30(-42) teeth on each side. Populus tremuloides
7 Seeds 6-9 per placenta; branchlets tomentose to glabrate; discs caducous. Populus heterophylla
7 Seeds (3-)7-15(-25) per placenta; branchlets glabrous, glabrate, or long-hairy; discs persistent > 8
8 Discs cup-shaped, 4-8 mm diam.; capsules spherical, (6-)7-9 mm > 9
8 Discs saucer-shaped, 1-4 mm diam.; capsules ovoid, (4-)8-11(-16) mm > 10
9 Capsules densely hairy to glabrate; blades: abaxial surface white to grayish white or greenish white (with red resin stain); margins not ciliate; preformed blade margins with (20-)35-40(-50) teeth on each side, sinuses 0.1-0.4 mm deep. Populus trichocarpa
9 Capsules glabrous; blades: abaxial surface yellowish green (red resin stain not evident); margins ciliate; preformed blade margins with 3-10(-15) teeth on each side, sinuses (0.2-)0.5-4(-5.5) mm deep. Populus fremontii
10 Pedicels to 3 mm; branchlets and petioles hairy; preformed blade margins with 20-45 teeth on each side, sinuses to 1.5 mm deep ×jackii
10 Pedicels 1-13 mm; branchlets and petioles glabrous or thinly long-hairy; preformed blade margins with (3-)5-15(-30) teeth on each side, sinuses (0.4-)0.7-5(-7) mm deep. Populus deltoides

Key to leafy specimens of Populus

1 Leaf blades usually 5-8(-10) cm, abaxial surface densely tomentose when young, retaining dense tomentum on at least some intervein regions > 2
1 Leaf blades (1-)3-20(-27.5) cm, abaxial surface glabrous, glabrate, densely hairy, silky, or pubescent (not densely tomentose when young, not tomentose on intervein regions) > 3
2 Leaf blades: abaxial surface tomentum bright white; neoformed blades (3 or) 5-lobed Populus alba
2 Leaf blades: abaxial surface tomentum dull grayish, tannish, or dirty white; neoformed blades irregularly toothed ×canescens
3 Petioles round, cylindrical, or slightly flattened distally to plane of blades > 4
3 Petioles flattened at right angle to plane of blades distally > 9
4 Leaf blades: base deeply cordate to subsagittate, apex obtuse to apiculate, abaxial surface pubescent to partly glabrate, retaining tomentum at least basally and on midvein. Populus heterophylla
4 Leaf blades: base acute, cuneate, rounded, truncate, or shallowly cordate, apex obtuse, acute, or acuminate, abaxial surface glabrous or hairy (hairs short and stiff) > 5
5 Petioles 0.2-0.8(-1.7) cm; leaf blades: abaxial surface whitish green (not obviously stained with reddish resin) > 6
5 Petioles 0.2-9.5 cm; leaf blades: abaxial surface white to grayish or greenish white, stained with reddish resin > 7
6 Leaf blades usually lanceolate to narrowly ovate. Populus angustifolia
6 Leaf blades elliptic-rhombate to obovate Populus simonii
7 Petioles densely pubescent, at least distally ×jackii
7 Petioles glabrous or sparsely pubescent > 8
8 Leaf blades usually triangular-ovate or narrowly ovate to cordate, base rounded to cordate; petioles often markedly swollen distally; w and s of Continental Divide. Populus trichocarpa
8 Leaf blades usually narrowly ovate to ovate (rarely broadly ovate), base rounded to broadly cuneate or subcordate; petioles not conspicuously swollen distally; e and n of Continental Divide. Populus balsamifera
9 Leaf blade: margins not translucent, not ciliate > 10
9 Leaf blade: margins translucent, ciliate > 11
10 Preformed blade: margins coarsely serrate, teeth (1-)5-12(-16) on each side, sinuses 0.3-4.5(-6) mm deep. Populus grandidentata
10 Preformed blade: margins subentire to finely crenate-serrate, teeth (12-)18-30 (-42) on each side, sinuses 0.1-1 mm deep. Populus tremuloides
11 Leaves: basilaminar glands (0 or) 1-6 > 12
11 Leaves: basilaminar glands 0 > 13
12 Basilaminar glands 0 or 1; blade bases broadly cuneate, apices gradually acuminate ×canadensis
12 Basilaminar glands 0-6; blade bases truncate to subcordate, apices abruptly acuminate. Populus deltoides
13 Largest preformed blade: margins with sinuses less than 1.2 mm deep Populus nigra
13 Largest preformed blade: margins with sinuses 2(-7) mm deep > 14
14 Neoformed blade: margins with (10-)25-40(-55) teeth on each side; preformed blade: margins with (3-)5-15(-30) teeth on each side. Populus deltoides
14 Neoformed blade: margins with (10-)20-30(-45) teeth on each side; preformed blade: margins with 3-10(-15) teeth on each side. Populus fremontii
... more about "Populus"
James E. Eckenwalder +
Linnaeus +
Worldwide +, mostly in northern hemisphere in moist to wet habitats +, Arctic Circle to s Mexico +, Asia (s China +, n India +, s Arabian Peninsula) +, n Africa +  and outlier in Kenya. +
Latin populus, the people, many fanciful allusions supposed but none certain +
Sp. Pl. +  and Gen. Pl. ed. +
1753 +  and 1754 +
eckenwalder1977a +, eckenwalder1984a +, eckenwalder1996a +  and sudworth1934a +
Populus +
Salicaceae +