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common cottonwood, cotonier, eastern cottonwood, necklace poplar, plains cottonwood

Alamo cottonwood, Fremont cottonwood

Habit Plants to 55 m, 35 dm diam.; moderately to strongly heterophyllous, (often 2 or more trunks near base). Plants to 30 m, 37 dm diam.; strongly heterophyllous, (often 2 or more trunks near base).
Bark

light brown, deeply furrowed.

pale tan, deeply furrowed.

Branchlets

yellow-brown, becoming tan by third year, round or 5-angled, coarse or not, (1–)2–3.5(–6) mm diam., glabrous or thinly long-hairy.

tannish brown, becoming paler tan to bone- white by third year, round, 1–3(–5) mm diam., slender to coarse, glabrous, glabrate, or sparsely to densely hairy, (yellowish).

Leaves

petiole distally flattened at right angle to plane of blade, (1–)3–8(–13) cm, about equaling blade length, (glabrous);

blade broadly triangular-ovate, (1–)3–9(–14) × (1.5–)3–9(–16.5) cm, w/l = 4/5–6/5, base truncate to cordate or broadly cuneate, basilaminar glands 0–6, round or tubular, margins translucent, ciliate, apex abruptly short- or long-acuminate, surfaces grayish green to bright green, glabrous (or visibly pilose only at emergence); preformed blade margins coarsely crenate-serrate midblade, teeth (3–)5–15(–30) on each side (graded, rounded), sinuses (0.4–)0.7–5(–7) mm deep; neoformed blade margins crenate-serrate, teeth (10–)25–40(–55) on each side (graded), sinuses (0.1–)0.5–1.5(–3) mm deep.

petiole distally flattened at right angle to plane of blade, 1–6(–9) cm, 3/5–3/4 blade length;

blade rhombic-ovate to broadly triangular-ovate, (1.5–)4–8(–14) × (1.5–)3–8(–11) cm, w/l = 3/5–1/1, base cuneate to truncate or cordate, basilaminar glands 0, margins translucent, ciliate, apex short- to long-acuminate, surfaces yellowish green, resin stains not evident, glabrous or densely hairy; preformed blade margins coarsely crenate-serrate midblade, teeth 3–10(–15) on each side (graded, rounded), sinuses (0.2–)0.5–4(–5.5) mm deep; neoformed blade margins finely crenate-serrate much of margin, teeth (10–)20–30(–45) on each side, sinuses 0.1–1 mm deep.

Pedicels

1–13(–17 in fruit) mm.

1–4(–5.5 in fruit) mm.

Flowers

discs saucer-shaped, not obviously oblique, entire, 1–3(–4) mm diam.;

stamens 30–40(–55);

anthers truncate;

ovary (3- or)4-carpelled, ovoid;

stigmas 2–4, platelike, spreading.

discs broadly cup-shaped, not obviously oblique, entire, (2.5–)4–7(–9) mm diam.;

stamens (30–)40–60(–70);

anthers truncate;

ovary 2–4-carpelled, spherical;

stigmas 2–4, flat, platelike, expanded.

Capsules

ovoid, (4–)8–11(–16) mm, glabrous, (3- or)4-valved.

spherical, (5–)6–11 mm, glabrous, 2–4-valved.

Seeds

(3–)7–10(–23) per placenta.

9–15(–25) per placenta.

Winter

buds greenish yellow, glabrous or stiffly hairy, resinous (resin yellow, moderately fragrant);

terminal buds (6–)8–15(–21) mm; flowering buds separated on branchlets, (8–)14–20(–28) mm.

buds yellow-brown, usually densely stiffly hairy, resinous (resin yellow);

terminal buds (4–)7–11(–14) mm; flowering buds separated on branchlets, (5–)11–18(–22) mm.

Catkins

loosely (3–)15–40(–55)-flowered, (0.7–)5–18(–24 in fruit) cm;

floral bract apex deeply cut, not ciliate.

loosely (10–)15–25(–35)-flowered, (3–)4.5–10(–14 in fruit) cm;

floral bract apex deeply cut, not ciliate.

2n

= 38.

= 38.

Populus deltoides

Populus fremontii

Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CO; CT; DC; DE; FL; GA; IA; ID; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; MD; MI; MN; MO; MS; MT; NC; ND; NE; NH; NJ; NM; NY; OH; OK; OR; PA; SC; SD; TN; TX; UT; VA; VT; WA; WI; WV; WY; AB; MB; ON; QC; SK; n Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AZ; CA; ID; NM; NV; TX; UT; n Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Subspecies 3 (3 in the flora).

Populus deltoides hybridizes with P. fremontii, the other native species of sect. Aigeiros, in the Colorado Plateau region (Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah) and trans-Pecos Texas. These hybrids involve P. deltoides subsp. wislizeni with both subspecies of P. fremontii and are difficult to distinguish because the parent species are so similar. They have shallowly cup-shaped discs 3–5 mm diam., pedicels 4–6 mm, and, usually, sparsely pubescent branchlets. Populus deltoides hybridizes also with three native members of sect. Tacamahaca. All three hybrids, P. ×generosa A. Henry (P. trichocarpa × P. deltoides), P. ×jackii Sargent (P. balsamifera × P. deltoides), and P. ×acuminata Rydberg (P. angustifolia × P. deltoides), are distinguished from P. deltoides by their buds with reddish resin, fewer triangular leaves with finer teeth, less flattening of the petiole, and a distinctly paler, slightly whitened abaxial leaf surface (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). Individual hybrids have distinct ranges corresponding to their parental regions of sympatry and may be distinguished from each other by relative leaf width (less than two-thirds as wide as long in P. ×acuminata and more than two-thirds as wide as long in the other two) and base shapes (cordate in P. ×jackii and cuneate in the other two). Hybrids with members of the other two sections are rare or unknown. Hybridization with P. heterophylla (sect. Leucoides) is apparently rare and very local in South Carolina, even though the region of sympatry of these two species occupies essentially the entire range of P. heterophylla. Reported hybrids with P. tremuloides (sect. Populus) named as P. ×bernardii B. Boivin (T. C. Brayshaw 1965b; B. Boivin 1966b) are actually individuals of P. ×jackii (Eckenwalder).

Two related members of sect. Aigeiros, Populus nigra Linnaeus and P. ×canadensis Moench, are often planted as staminate clones, often persist after cultivation, and spread by root suckers but never become naturalized. Most individuals of Eurasian P. nigra cultivated in North America are Lombardy poplars (cv. Italica), an unmistakable, narrowly columnar, staminate clone with heavily buttressed trunk, rhombic preformed leaves, and triangular-ovate neoformed leaves broader than wide. This tree has been known since the eighteenth century and is widely (over-)planted throughout the temperate portion of the flora area as an accent tree. It hybridizes sporadically here with the three native balsam poplars, P. angustifolia, P. balsamifera, and P. trichocarpa; hybrids are discussed under those species. A rare hybrid with P. fremontii (P. ×inopina Eckenwalder) apparently originated from an uncommon pistillate tree of P. nigra (J. E. Eckenwalder 1982). It resembles P. fremontii in leaf shape but has dark reddish brown winter buds.

Populus nigra and P. ×canadensis are both staminate and are similar in having winter buds usually 12+ mm with a balsamic fragrance and orange-red resin. The branchlets are round and bright orange-brown to reddish brown in the first year, turning tan by the third year. The petioles are distally flattened at a right angle to the plane of blade. The margins of the leaf blade are translucent and ciliate; the leaf surfaces are glabrous or glabrate to pubescent but not tomentose. The catkins usually have more than 15 flowers, (4–)7–15 cm. The floral disc is entire, persistent, broadly cup- or saucer-shaped, and not obviously oblique. The anthers are usually truncate. The 2-carpelled ovary is ovoid to spherical and the 2–4 stigmas are expanded. The floral bracts are not ciliate and are glabrous abaxially. The two taxa differ in that P. nigra has branchlets that are nearly parallel, leaf blades without basilaminar glands, preformed blade margins with sinuses no more than 1.2 mm deep, and 12–20(–30) stamens; P. ×canadensis has divergent branchlets, branching at 50º or more, leaf blades with no more than 1 basilaminar gland, preformed blades with the base broadly cuneate and apex gradually acuminate, and (15–)20–30 stamens.

Populus ×canadensis (P. ×euramericana Guinier [illegitimate name]; B. K. Boom 1957) is an intercontinental hybrid that first arose spontaneously between P. deltoides and P. nigra after the former was introduced into Europe in the late seventeenth century. Deliberate new hybrids of this parentage are one of the mainstays of Europe’s growing commercial poplar plantations. They are also important in eastern North America but are often replaced by P. ×generosa (P. trichocarpa × P. deltoides) in commercial plantations in British Columbia, Oregon, and Washington. Only one clone is commonly, and very widely, grown horticulturally, the Carolina poplar (‘Eugenei’), a staminate clone with a fairly narrow habit inherited from its staminate parent, the Lombardy poplar. It is often confused with P. deltoides, with narrower preformed leaves, often slightly longer than wide, with more numerous, smaller teeth, and with bases obtuse or rounded, rather than truncate or subcordate. It differs further from P. deltoides subspp. deltoides and monilifera in having 0–1 basilaminar glands rather than 2–6.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Subspecies 2 (2 in the flora).

Populus fremontii hybridizes with P. deltoides subsp. wislizeni where they come in contact in the Colorado Plateau region and trans-Pecos Texas. Hybrids have longer pedicels and narrower discs than does P. fremontii, and less densely hairy twigs in regions where P. fremontii is densely pubescent. It also hybridizes with the two members of sect. Tacamahaca with which it overlaps, P. trichocarpa (P. ×parryi Sargent), and P. angustifolia (P. ×hinckleyana Correll) (synonyms P. ×acuminata Rydberg nothomorph rehderi Sargent and P. ×intercurrens S. Goodrich & S. L. Welsh). Both hybrids have smaller, more numerous teeth on preformed leaves than does P. fremontii, with blades clearly paler abaxially than adaxially, and buds with reddish resin (J. E. Eckenwalder 1984). Preformed leaves are broadly ovate to heart-shaped in P. ×parryi (Eckenwalder 1984b) and usually ovate in P. ×hinckleyana; trees from the type locality in the Davis Mountains, Texas, had round leaves (D. S. Correll 1960). They could be distinguished from P. ×parryi by their smaller leaf blades and hairy petioles. Trees of P. ×parryi have been found in Mohave County, Arizona, east of the present range of P. trichocarpa (Eckenwalder 1992).

Populus ×inopina Eckenwalder is a hybrid between P. fremontii and P. nigra known only from the type locality along Coyote Creek, San Jose, California, where P. nigra was the seed parent (J. E. Eckenwalder 1982). Trees of the same parentage were produced artificially by A. B. Stout and E. J. Schreiner (1933); none appears to have survived. They differ from P. nigra in broader habit, twigs thicker, buds thicker and less red, broader and more cordate leaves with larger teeth, and more numerous stamens. They differ from P. fremontii in narrower habit, twigs more orange, buds without a green cast, longer leaf apices, more numerous teeth, and fewer stamens. If pistillate trees occur, they would be expected to have 2 or 3 carpels and discs 3–5 mm diam., both intermediate between those of the parents.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Leaf blades: apices long-acuminate, bases usually with 2 round basilaminar glands; pedicel lengths uniform, 1-6(-8 in fruit) mm.
subsp. monilifera
1. Leaf blades: apices short-acuminate, bases usually with 0 or 3-6 tubular basilaminar glands; pedicel lengths progressively graded or uniform, 1-13 (-17 in fruit) mm
→ 2
2. Winter buds usually glabrous; leaves: basilaminar glands 3-6, abaxial surface pilose at emergence; neoformed blades: lengths usually distinctly greater than widths; pedicel lengths graded (shorter from base to apex).
subsp. deltoides
2. Winter buds pubescent; leaves: basilaminar glands 0, abaxial surface glabrous at emergence; neoformed blades: lengths usually less than widths; pedicel lengths uniform
subsp. wislizeni
1. Neoformed blade: usually about as wide as long, rarely wider, bases truncate or cordate, apices short-acuminate; branchlets glabrous or glabrate to densely hairy.
subsp. fremontii
1. Neoformed blade: longer than wide, bases cuneate or truncate, apices long-acuminate; branchlets usually densely hairy.
subsp. mesetae
Source FNA vol. 7, p. 17. FNA vol. 7, p. 19.
Parent taxa Salicaceae > Populus Salicaceae > Populus
Sibling taxa
P. angustifolia, P. balsamifera, P. fremontii, P. grandidentata, P. heterophylla, P. tremuloides, P. trichocarpa
P. angustifolia, P. balsamifera, P. deltoides, P. grandidentata, P. heterophylla, P. tremuloides, P. trichocarpa
Subordinate taxa
P. deltoides subsp. deltoides, P. deltoides subsp. monilifera, P. deltoides subsp. wislizeni
P. fremontii subsp. fremontii, P. fremontii subsp. mesetae
Name authority W. Bartram ex Marshall: Arbust. Amer., 106. (1785) S. Watson: Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 10: 350. (1875)
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