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Populus angustifolia James
NARROWLEAF COTTONWOOD
Life   Plantae   Dicotyledoneae   Salicaceae   Populus


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Associates · map
FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Amphisphaeriaceae  Amphisphaeria populi @ BPI (3)

Amphisphaeria separans @ BPI (1)
Aphididae  Aphis ( @ CSUC_TCN (2)

Ceruraphis eriophori @ NCSU_ENT (1)

Chaitophorus neglectus @ NCSU_ENT (14)

Chaitophorus populicola @ AMNH_PBI (1); CSUC_TCN (13); NCSU_ENT (12)

Chaitophorus populifolii @ CSUC_TCN (2)

Pemphigus betae @ NCSU (5)

Pemphigus junctisensoriatus @ NCSU (6)

Pemphigus monophagus @ NCSU (31)

Pemphigus populicaulis @ NCSU (1)

Pemphigus populiglobuli @ AMNH_PBI (2); NCSU (7)

Pemphigus populitransversus @ AMNH_PBI (1)

Pemphigus populivenae @ NCSU (23)

Pterocomma pseudopopuleum @ NCSU (4)

Thecabius ( @ NCSU (84)
Botryosphaeriaceae  Phyllosticta brunnea @ BPI (8)
Cicadellidae  Empoasca orthodens @ III (1)

Idiocerus ( @ AMNH_PBI (2); UKYL_TCN (8)

Kybos angustifoliae @ III (5)

Kybos cascada @ III (2)

Kybos gribisa @ III (4)

Kybos livingstonii @ III (2)

Kybos sprita @ III (4)

Paraphlepsius ( @ AMNH_PBI (5)
Dermateaceae  Chlorosplenium aeruginosum @ BPI (1)

Cylindrosporium oculatum @ BPI (3)

Cylindrosporium saximontanense @ BPI (8)

Marssonina piriformis @ BPI (1)

Marssonina populi @ BPI (5)
Diatrypaceae  Cryptosphaeria populina @ BPI (2)
Didymosphaeriaceae  Asteromella angustifoliorum @ BPI (1)
Elsinoaceae  Sphaceloma populi @ BPI (3)
Erysiphaceae  Phyllactinia corylea @ BPI (4)

Uncinula salicis @ BPI (8)
Helotiaceae  Cenangium populneum @ BPI (1)
Hyaloscyphaceae  Dasyscyphus arida @ BPI (1)
Hypocreaceae  Hypomyces @ BPI (1)
Leptosphaeriaceae  Coniothyrium myriocarpum @ BPI (1)
Melampsoraceae  Melampsora albertensis @ BPI (16)

Melampsora medusae @ BPI (5)

Melampsora occidentalis @ BPI (27)
Mycosphaerellaceae  Clypeispora angustifoliorum @ BPI (1)

Mycosphaerella angustifoliorum @ BPI (1)

Septoria musiva @ BPI (13)

Septoria populi @ BPI (5)

Septoria @ BPI (1)
Nectriaceae  Tubercularia confluens @ BPI (1)
Niessliaceae  Melanopsamma pomiformis @ BPI (1)
Pentatomidae  Banasa dimiata @ CSUC_TCN (3)
Pleurotaceae  Pleurotus ostreatus @ BPI (4)
Polyporaceae  Fomes applanatus @ BPI (1)

Fomes igniarius @ BPI (1)

Lenzites saepiaria @ BPI (1)

Polyporus cinnabarinus @ BPI (2)

Trametes hispida @ BPI (2)

Trametes peckii @ BPI (1)

Trametes stuppea @ BPI (1)

Trametes suaveolens @ BPI (1)
Sclerotiniaceae  Sclerotinia @ BPI (2)
Teichosporaceae  Teichospora fulgurata @ BPI (1)

Teichospora oblongispora @ BPI (1)

Teichospora populi @ BPI (1)

Teichospora pygmaea @ BPI (1)
Ulvaceae  Solenia endophila @ BPI (1)
Valsaceae  Cytospora ambiens @ BPI (1)

Cytospora chrysosperma @ BPI (20)

Cytospora @ BPI (10)

Valsa sordida @ BPI (2)
Xylariaceae  Anthostomella wilkesiae @ BPI (1)

Rosellinia pulveracea @ BPI (1)
_  Coniosporium corticale @ BPI (1)

Coniothecium epidermidis @ BPI (1)

Strickeria populi @ BPI (1)

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FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 7 | Salicaceae | Populus

4. Populus angustifolia E. James, Account Exped. Pittsburgh. 1: 497. 1823.

Narrowleaf or mountain cottonwood, liard amer

Populus ×sennii B. Boivin; P. tweedyi Britton

Plants to 20 m, 7 dm diam.; moderately heterophyllous. Bark light brown, shallowly furrowed. Branchlets orange-brown, becoming whitish tan by third year, round or 5-angled, 1.5-2.5(-3.5) mm diam., not coarse, glabrous. Winter buds reddish brown, glabrous, resinous (resin red, fragrant); terminal buds (3-)6-9 (-13) mm; flowering buds clustered distally on branchlets, 8-12(-18) mm. Leaves : petiole round, adaxially slightly channeled distally, 0.2-0.8(-1.7) cm, 1/8-1/5 blade length, (glabrous); blade usually lanceolate to narrowly ovate, (1.5-)4-8(-13.5) × 0.8-2.5(-4) cm, w/l = 1/5-1/2, base acute to rounded, basilaminar glands 0, margins not translucent, not ciliate, apex acute, abaxial surface whitish green, weakly glaucous, adaxial dark green, glabrous; preformed blade margins subentire to minutely, evenly crenate-serrate throughout, teeth (14-)23-35(-65) on each side, sinuses 0.1-0.3 mm deep; neoformed blade margins finely crenate-serrate throughout, teeth 35-65(-80) on each side, sinuses 0.1-0.6(-1.5) mm deep. Catkins ± densely 35-50-flowered, 3-8(-9 in fruit) cm; floral bract apex deeply cut, not ciliate. Pedicels 0.5-1.5(-3 in fruit) mm. Flowers: discs shallowly cup-shaped, not obviously oblique, entire , 1-1.5(-3) mm diam.; stamens 10-20; anthers truncate; ovary 2-carpelled, ovoid to spherical; stigmas 2-4, broad, expanded. Capsules broadly ovoid to spherical, 3-5 mm, glabrous, 2-valved. Seeds (2-) 4-7(-9) per placenta. 2 n = 38.

Flowering Apr-May; fruiting Jun-Jul. Streamsides in mountains and foothills; 1500-2400(-3300) m; Alta., Sask.; Ariz., Colo., Idaho, Mont., Nebr., Nev., N.Mex., S.Dak., Tex., Utah, Wyo.; Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Sonora).

Populus angustifolia has been mistakenly reported from eastern California and eastern Oregon based on intergrades with, and narrow-leaved specimens of, P. trichocarpa in those arid regions. It is a characteristic species of the Rocky Mountains, extending onto the plains and overlapping in canyon mouths as they exit the mountains with two North American species of sect. Aigeiros, P. deltoides and P. fremontii , and hybridizing with each of them. It also hybridizes with the other two native species of sect. Tacamahaca, P. balsamifera and P. trichocarpa . The hybrid with P. balsamifera , P. × brayshawii B. Boivin, differs most obviously in longer petioles, at least 2.5 cm, and is increasingly common from Colorado northwards, largely replacing P. angustifolia in southern Alberta (T. C. Brayshaw 1965b; S. B. Rood et al. 1985). The hybrid with P. trichocarpa (unnamed) is uncommon and largely confined to the Great Basin region, including Montana (W. W. White 1951). Populus angustifolia does not hybridize naturally with P. tremuloides , as sometimes reported (B. Boivin 1966b). The specimens that formed the basis for that report are long shoots of P. angustifolia with relatively coarsely toothed neoformed leaves.

Populus × acuminata Rydberg is the intersectional hybrid of P. angustifolia with P. deltoides (sect. Aigeiros ) that occurs on floodplains of major streams, primarily along the foot of the Rocky Mountain Front Ranges where these species grow together, but also extends onto the plains and Colorado Plateau (Alberta, Arizona, Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming) (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). As with other cloning hybrids, it can often occur without one or both parents. It differs from P. angustifolia in larger, ovate leaves with coarser teeth, less color differentiation between abaxial and adaxial surfaces, and longer petioles that are slightly flattened side to side near the junction with the blade. Because of its frequency and morphological consistency, P. × acuminata was first described as a species and is often treated as such in local and regional floras. It was long suspected of being a hybrid, and its hybrid origin was amply confirmed by multiple lines of evidence in the 1970s and 1980s (D. J. Crawford 1974; A. G. Jones and D. S. Seigler 1975; S. B. Rood et al. 1985). The name has also been widely misapplied to intersectional hybrids involving other combinations of balsam poplar and cottonwood parents (Eckenwalder).

Populus × berolinensis Dippel is a similar cultivated, introduced, intersectional hybrid between two Eurasian species, P. laurifolia Ledebour (sect. Tacamahaca ) and P. nigra Linnaeus (sect. Aigeiros ). It has an upright growth habit and leaves similar in shape to those of P. × acuminata , but more balsam poplar-like with smaller teeth and greater color differentiation between abaxial and adaxial surfaces. Pistillate individuals may hybridize with native species of both parent sections (W. G. Ronald and J. W. Steele 1974).

Populus × hinckleyana Correll (synonyms P. × acuminata nothomorph rehderi Sargent and P. × intercurrens S. Goodrich & S. L. Welsh) is the intersectional hybrid of P. angustifolia with P. fremontii (sect. Aigeiros ) and is moderately common in canyons throughout their range of sympatry (Arizona, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah, and Mexico [Chihuahua, Sonora]). At the type locality in the Davis Mountains, Texas, P. angustifolia is now absent, and the cottonwood parent is P. fremontii subsp. mesetae , but other occurrences have arisen through hybridization with P. fremontii subsp. fremontii (G. C. Bennion et al. 1961; J. E. Eckenwalder 1984; P. Keim et al. 1989). It differs from P. angustifolia in hairy young shoots and a broader floral disc.

A related Eurasian species, Populus simonii Carrière, is moderately commonly cultivated, especially in the form of a broadly pyramidal staminate clone ('Pyramidalis'). It shares the slender, often 5-angled twigs and relatively small leaves of P. angustifolia , but differs most noticeably in elliptic blades of preformed leaves and obovate blades of neoformed leaves.

Updated: 2024-04-26 15:33:52 gmt
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