Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Gray Birch

Betulis populifolia

Description:

The betulis populifolia, or gray birch, is a species of birch with serrated, narrow, triangular leaves. The bark is white, though less so than the white birch, and slowly develops gray or black patches. The bark is also characterised by horizontal lines (see photos 2-4 above). As we can see now that autumn is upon us, the leaves of the gray birch turn a dull yellow or orangey-brown.

Habitat:

Deciduous forests of eastern North America

Notes:

Fun fact: the bark of the gray birch was used by the Iroquois Native Americans for a variety of purposes! It can be used to shield oneself from the cold, and as paper (though birch bark paper is primarily made of white birch). On campus, this gray birch, which is situated by the GW circle, provides a flash of color amidst the dark green pine trees that surround it. Birch trees also happen to be my favorite tree, and this is one of the few I have found on campus. Over the summer, I go to camp on an island called Birch Island, which is in Lake Wahwashkesh in Ontario. There are so many birch trees there that our paths are lined with birch logs, the bark of which illuminates these paths at night. While at camp, I developed an appreciation for all the tree has to offer: shelter, fire, shade, beauty. Now that I'm at school, the birch tree pictured above keeps me mindful of all that nature has to offer, and also provides a sense of familiarity. - Emma Kukielski

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

andoverbiology
Spotted by
andoverbiology

Andover, Massachusetts, USA

Spotted on Oct 16, 2013
Submitted on Oct 17, 2013

Spotted for Mission

Related Spottings

Gray Birch Gray Birch Gray Birch Gray Birch

Nearby Spottings

Hemlock Yew bush Copper Beech Sugar Maple

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team