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Alnus oblongifolia Torr.
ARIZONA ALDER
Life   Plantae   Dicotyledoneae   Betulaceae   Alnus


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FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Botryosphaeriaceae  Phyllosticta carpini @ 761847B (1); BPI (2)

Phyllosticta dearnessii @ 387768B (1)
Corticiaceae  Laeticorticium roseum @ BPI (1)
Gnomoniaceae  Gnomonia alni @ BPI (2)
Hyphodermataceae  Hypochnicium bombycinum @ BPI (1)

Hypochnicium punctulatum @ BPI (1)
Mycosphaerellaceae  Phloeospora dearnessii @ 387768A (1); 761847A (1)

Septoria alnifolia @ BPI (1)
Noctuidae  Hypospila californica @ BPI (1)
Peniophoraceae  Peniophora burtii @ BPI (1)
Polyporaceae  Perenniporia amylodextrinoidea @ BPI (1)

Polyporus gilvus @ BPI (1)

Poria tenuis @ BPI (1)
Stereaceae  Gloeocystidiellum lactescens @ BPI (1)
Tricholomataceae  Tricholomopsis streetsii @ BPI (1)

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FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 3 | Betulaceae | Alnus

2. Alnus oblongifolia Torrey in W. H. Emory, Rep. U.S. Mex. Bound. 2: 204. 1859.

Arizona alder, New Mexican alder, aliso (Mexico)

Trees , to 30 m; trunks often several, crowns spreading. Bark dark gray, smooth, becoming blackish and breaking into shallow vertical plates in age; lenticels inconspicuous. Winter buds stipitate, ovoid, 4--8 mm, apex rounded; stalks 1.5--4 mm; scales 2, equal, valvate, sometimes incompletely covering underlying leaves, moderately resin-coated. Leaf blade narrowly ovate or lanceolate to narrowly elliptic, 5--9 × 3--6 cm, leathery, base narrowly to broadly cuneate or narrowly rounded, margins flat, sharply and coarsely doubly serrate, rarely evenly and densely short-serrate, major teeth sharp, acuminate, secondary teeth distinctly larger, apex long to short-acuminate, rarely acute; surfaces abaxially glabrous to sparsely pubescent or infrequently villous, moderately resin-coated. Inflorescences formed season before flowering and exposed during winter; staminate catkins in 1 or more clusters of 3--6, 3.5--10 cm; pistillate catkins in 1 or more clusters of 2--7. Flowering before new growth in spring. Infructescences ovoid, ellipsoid, or nearly cylindric, 1--2.5 × 0.8--1.5 cm; peduncles 5--10 mm. Samaras elliptic to obovate, wings narrower than body, irregular in shape, leathery.

Flowering early spring. Sandy or rocky stream banks and moist slopes, often in mountain canyons; 1000--2300 m; Ariz., N.Mex.; Mexico (n Chihuahua and n Sonora).

Alnus oblongifolia is closely related to the Mexican and Central American A . acuminata , with which it has sometimes been confused. It is found only in scattered populations in the temperate deciduous forest vegetation zone of high mountains in the arid Southwest.

Updated: 2024-04-27 20:26:55 gmt
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