Top Banner
Michigan Michigan Trees Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program
39

Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Dec 23, 2015

Download

Documents

Jesse Eaton
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Michigan Michigan TreesTrees

By: Andrea Berry

Michigan Water Stewardship Program

Page 2: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Kinds of Trees• Gymnosperms

– Conifers– 10 native to

Michigan– Leaves remain for

several years• Exception:

tamarack (e. larch)– Evolved during

Mesozoic times• 245-145mya• Triassic 245mya• Jurassic 208mya• Cretaceous 145mya

• Angiosperms– Flowering plants– Deciduous (North

Temperate Zone)• “Hardwoods”

– Evergreen (Tropical)• None native to MI

– First appeared during Cretaceous

– Became widely abundant during Tertiary 65mya

– Today far outnumber conifers in # & diversity of species

Page 3: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Parts of a Tree

• Stem– Bark

• Dead material• Protects

– Cambium • Living material• Produces bark

– Phloem • Moves nutrients “down” stem from leaves to

roots

– Xylem• Moves water “up” stem from roots

Page 4: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Parts of a Tree cont’• Leaves

– Chloroplasts • Photosynthesis

– Stomata• Control water pressure

– Simple • Not divided into distinct parts, may be lobed

– Compound• Divided into leaflets

– Arrangement• Alternate, opposite, whorled

– Venation• Netted=reticulate, eucicots (aka dicots)• Parallel=striate, monocots

Page 5: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Monocots vs. Eudicots

• Monocotyledons– Monocots – 1 seed leaf – 65,000 species– Grasses, lilies,

irises, orchids, cattails, palms

– *Conifers*– Parallel veination

• Eudicotyledons– Eudicots – 2 seed leaves– Trees, shrubs,

herbs (nonwoody plants)

– Not conifers!– Netted veination

Page 6: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Ash Trees

•Opposite, pinnately compound leaves

•Black, white, mountain ash

Page 7: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Ashes

Black Ash

•9 leaflets

•Wet, low swampy areas

White Ash

•7-9 leaflets

•Upland drier sites

American Mountain-Ash

•9-17 leaflets

•N. acidic bogs, ornamental

Page 8: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Aspens

• Boreal, northern species• Dry or moist soils• Reproduce by cloning• Adapted to fire • 2 species

– Large-toothed– Trembling (quaking)

Page 10: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Birches

Yellow birch

Gray birch

Paper birch

Page 11: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Cedars

Eastern Red cedar

Northern White cedar

Page 12: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

American Elm

Page 13: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Balsam Fir

•Needles 2-ranked

•Needles spirally arranged

•Multiple white “lines” on underside of needles

•Distinct balsam smell

•Seed cone smooth & upward

Page 14: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Eastern Hemlock

•Needles 2-ranked & spirally arranged

•Needles flat

•Seed cone round and droops

Page 15: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Sycamore

Page 16: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Black WillowWillow – water-loving species

associated with riparian areas

Page 17: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Maples

• 7 species native to Michigan (5 trees)• *All leaves are arranged opposite*• *All leaves are simple*

– Except Boxelder, compound

• Winged-fruit – samara• Cool, moist habitats• Sensitive to fire b/c bark is thin• Shade-tolerant (except Boxelder)• Black, Norway, Red, Silver, Striped,

Sugar, Boxelder

Page 18: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Maples

Page 19: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Maples

Page 20: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Maples

Black Maple

Page 21: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Maples

Page 22: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Dogwood

Page 23: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Oaks

• 400 species, 12 native to Michigan• Massive trunks, thick, fire-resistant bark,

large, deep roots• Broad wide spreading crown• Fruit – acorn• Monoecious – male & female flower on

different part of the same tree• Young oaks retain leaves in winter• Very long-lived• Black, Bur, N. Red, Pin, Swamp White, White

Page 24: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

White Oak

Page 25: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Northern Red Oak

Page 26: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Bur Oak

Page 27: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Oaks

Black OakSwamp White

Oak

Page 28: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Oaks

Pin Oak

Page 29: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Pines

• 36 species in US, 3 native to MI• Extensively logged, some with poor

management, ex. White pine• All pines survive well in dry coarse soils – very

deep root system• Many require fire to regenerate• Cones require 2 years to mature• Leaves persist for several years• Distinguishing feature: needle clusters from 2-5

– Soft Pines – 5 leaves in a cluster– Hard Pines – 2-3 needles in a cluster

Page 30: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Soft Pines – 5 Needles

Page 31: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Hard Pines – 2 Needles

2-ranked long needles; plantation

tree

Page 32: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Hard Pines – 2 NeedlesScotch pine – “twisted”

needlesJack Pine – straight

needles

Page 33: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Jack Pines

Before Burning After Burning

Page 34: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Jack Pines

•Require fire (natural or prescribed) to regenerate

•Thrive on very sandy dry soils

•Kirtland’s Warbler nesting habitat

Page 35: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Tamarack

•Looses needles in winter

•Nodules on branches

Page 36: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Spruces

• 7 species in US, 2 native to MI• “Triangle” shaped• Tolerate acidic, undrained soils

– Shallow roots – Low nutrient requirement

• Needles are 4-sided & persist 5-10 years

• White, Black, Norway Spruces

Page 37: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Spruces

•Whitish glow, upward branches

•Upland sites

•Green-yellow glow, droopy branches

•Introduced ornamental

Page 38: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Black Spruce

Wetland species

Page 39: Michigan Trees By: Andrea Berry Michigan Water Stewardship Program.

Thank You!

Questions?