TREES AND SHRUBS OF PENQUIS VIRTUAL NATURE CENTER
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Nearly 40 species of trees are found in the Penquis Virtual Nature Center. Including important
shrubs, the list climbs well past the 40 mark. These, icluding some of surrounding areas and
ornamental plantings, included for compelteness, are listed below. They are separated into
conifers, or softwoods, almost all of which are evergreen, and hardwoods, or broad-leaved trees, almost all of which
in this area are deciduous. Distinguishing features are listed, but remember that some of
these are quite obscure and it would take many years of study to make all the distinctions
accurately. The same would be true were you to use visual cues. In fact, not all experts agree
on the classification of plants. Use the list to help you enjoy nature and to understand some
of the questions that botanists, foresters, envriomentalists, hikers, and others ask.
Use this list in conjunction with the tree key to help
you find your way through list of trees and shrubs, hopefully to identify particular species
or groups.
CAUTION ON POISON IVY, SUMAC. Be careful about messing around too much with vines.
This applies to everybody, not just the visually impaired. Some vines
can cause skin rashes that in some people are quite painful and even dangerous.
- Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus). Needles in bundles of five, short finger-length. Bark smooth on young trees,
becoming ridged and plated with age. Cone six inches or so long and narrow, resinous.
- Red pine (Pinus resinosa) Needles three to five inches and in twos. Break cleanly when
bent. Cone small. Bark in flat, thin plates.
- Jack pine (Pinus banksiana) Needles one to two inches and in twos. Stiff. Cones small and
bent in toward twig. Often held many years to be released by fire because the tree needs bare
soil to germinate. Bark thin and flaky.
- Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) -- introduced. Needles in twos, two to three inches. Cones
small and with prickle on scales. Bark thin and scaly.
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All our spruces have short, stiff rounded to four-sided needles. All have small cones.
- White spruce (Picea glauca). Fairly blunt, finger-tip-length needles, often more divergent from twig than other
native species. Cat box
smell when crushed. Cones to two inches and thin.
- Black spruce (Picea mariana) Shorter needles. Very small cones may be persistent for years. Wet feet
is indication of this species.
- Red spruce (Picea rubens) Shorter needles. Cones medium for our spruces. Dry feet and no cat
box smell may indicate this species.
- Norway spruce (Picea abies) -- introduced. Drooping branches and cones to seven inches long.
Found only where planted.
- Blue spruce (Picea pungens) -- introduced. Cones large than our spruces, but smaller than
Norway. Needles longer than white spruce, stiff and very sharp. Scientific name 'pungens' means sharp. Stand out from
twig, just waiting for an unwary grab. Remember pungens means that it will 'punge' a hole in your hand.
Found only where planted.
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- Balsam fir (Abies balsamea) The Christmas tree. Bark smooth with resin pockets. Will stick
to your hand. Needles flexible and flat perhaps an inch long, generally in two rows on opposite sides of branch.
Cones upright, unlike most other conifers, and found only high in tree. They are rarely found
as they disintigrate to release their seed on maturity. Similar Fraser fir (Abies Fraserii) is
sometimes planted and sold as Christmas tree. It is similar and native to the Appalachians.
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- Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) Needles flexible, flat, shorter than fingertip length. Bark plated and scaly. Cones
small, generally smaller than the end of your little finger, and can be borne in great abundance
during good seed years.
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- Northern whitecedar (Thuja occidentalis) Swamp tree with vertically shredding bark and tiny
cones. Leaves lay flat to twig.
- Common juniper (Juniperus communis) Small shrub in our area.
- Canada yew (Taxus canadensis) Needles like fir, but shrub and fruit is soft poisonous flesh
around prominent seed.
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- Tamarack, eastern larch (Larix laricina)
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- Pussy willow (Salix discolor) is the most common willow found on the center. It's leaves
are roughly the size and shape of a man's finger (but flat) with slightly toothed margins.
It is mainly shrubby. The flower clusters,
or catkins, are soft and fuzzy and appear early in the spring, generally during mud season. Found
in wet areas.
- Bebb willow (Salix bebbiana) is also shrubby, but has leaves that are wider than those of
pussy willow and are toothed only above the center, usually. Found in wet areas.
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The species that occur here (bigtooth and quaking aspen) have smooth bark that breaks into plates
on the lower trunks of older trees. The tops break easily and they are short lived. They are
early succession trees that are found where logging or fire has occured. They are in the willow
family.
- Quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) has small, rounded, leaves with small marginal teeth. The
leaf stems are flat, and the leaves tremble in any breeze, leading to its name. If you are
around aspens, listen for the leaves in any wind and see if you can made a useful identification
key from the sound.
- Bigtooth aspen (Populus grandidentata) has palm-sized leaves (several times as big as
quaking aspen leaves) with large teeth on the margins. Leaf stems are flattened as in quaking
aspen. These trees leaf out later than quaking
aspen.
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- Smooth, or hazel alder (Alnus rugosa) is a shrub or small tree of wet areas. The alternate leaves are
oval with pointed tips and finely toothed margins. They may be the size of a woman's palm.
The most distinctive feature is the tiny (smaller
than the tip of your little finger)
seed cones that persist through the winter. Alders are in the birch family.
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- Gray birch (Betula populifolia) is a small, poorly formed tree with smooth white, non-peeling bark.
It has alternate wide-based, toothed leaves the size of a child's palm, that taper to a long point. The tree grows in disturbed areas
and is short-lived.
- White paper, or canoe birch (Betula papyrifera) is also an early successional tree, but of better
form and longer life. The bark is white, smooth, and peeling. Alternate
leaves are oval and toothed and child's palm-sized. The
bark was used for canoes and as parchment. It burns quickly and was also used to start fires
in bad weather.
- Yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis) resembles white birch, but the bark is dark yellow. The
alternate leaves are bigger (woman's palm-size) and uneven at the base. The twigs have a wintergreen smell when tapped. This
species is the one most often used for syrup in our area (not that any are much used). It is
a later successional species than are our other birches, often forming with beech and sugar maple
a long-lasting forest.
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- Ironwood (Ostrya virginiana) is a small, uncommon tree with shreddy bark and birch-like alternate leaves.
Its wood is heavy, hard, and dense. The best key is the bark which shreds in long, vertical strips.
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- American and beaked hazel (Corylus americana, Corylus rostrata) are similar shrubs. Both have
alternate oval leaves the size of a young child's palm and toothed and pointed. The best way to tell them
is by the fruits. Beaked hazel nuts have a covering that is drawn out into a long papery tube
and ripen in August or September. American hazel lacks the tube and ripens about a month earlier.
Both are edible if you can beat the insects and squirrels to them.
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- American beech (Fagus americana) is a large, smooth-barked tree with oval papery leaves the
length of a hand. The bark is hard to distinguish from red maple when the latter is young, so
remember that maple leaves and twigs grow opposite each other, beech leaves are alternate. The
nuts are valued by wildlife and humans alike, though the critters usually get there before I do.
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- Red oak (Quercus rubra) is a large tree with vertically-ridged bark. The alternate leaves are deeply
cut and up to hand-sized. There is a bristle at the tips of the large teeth or lobes. Buds
are clustered toward the ends of twigs. Acorns the size of a child's thumb mature in two years and
are bitter unless treated. Squirrels don't seem to mind, though.
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- Shadbush or serviceberry (Amelanchier arborea) has alternate leaves variable in size,
1-4 inches, toothed.
White flowers appear before or with leaves. One of the earliest blooming plants in the
forest. Bark thin, smooth, with shallow vertical fissures.
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- Pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica) is a small tree with smooth, reddish bark and orangish,
horizontal bands. The leaves are alternate, lance-shaped, finger-length with tiny rounded
teeth on the margin and often tiny warty projections on stem right at base of leaf. These
projections can generally be felt and can be used to distinguish the cherries from most
other groups. Pin cherry follows fire or logging and is short-lived. The fruit is sour, but
eaten by wildlife.
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- American mountain-ash (Sorbus americana) is not really an ash, but its alternate, compound leaves
are somewhat like the opposite, compound leaves of the ashes. In compound leaves, there is no
bud at the base of the leaflet, but only at the base of the leaf stem where it joins the twig.
In this species, the entire leaf is about hand-length while the toothed leaflets are
thumb-sized and thumb-shaped in outline. The bark is thin, usually smooth, and light gray. The fruit
is fingertip sized, showy orange-red, and borne in clusters.
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- Roses (Rosa) are mostly spiny shrubs with alternate, compound leaves and small leaflets. The
flowers are generally, but not always, showy and fragrant. The hips, or seed pods left behind
are fingertip to thumbtip sized and sometimes showy themselves. They have been used to make various
beverages and rose hip jelly.
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- Raspberries (Rubus) are a large group of related shrubby plants. Most are prickly, but not
all. Many have showy white, fragrant flowers. Most have pleasant-tasting fruit, but not all. Most have compound
leaves, but some have simple, vaguely maple-shaped and sized leafs. Leaves are opposite. In our
area, if you grab a shrub cane and immediately hell, 'ouch'!, it's probably a raspberry or a rose.
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- Staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina) is a small tree with alternate, compound leaves with loothed
margins. The thick twigs are velvety-hairy enough that you can probably feel them. Fruit appears
in a showy cluster of red. In dry sunny locations.
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- Winterberry (Ilex laevigata) is a large shrub with alternate oval leaves up to 2 inches long.
Fruits small, red, grow on short stocks from main stem.
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- Sugar maple (Acer saccharum) produces most of our maple syrup. The opposite leaves are palm-sized,
opposite, deeply cleft into generally 5 lobes, and with a few large teeth. Twigs are slim and
winter buds are small. Bark is finely ridged becoming heavily plated and ridged on larger trees.
Maples above 10 inches in diameter can be tapped without damage to the tree. Check with your
local extension office. Maple keys (seeds with wings) are the length of a child's thumb. The wood is valuable. Can
form extensive long-term forests with yellow birch and beech.
- Red maple (Acer rubrum) is also called swamp maple, though it is found in some dryer areas as
well. Bark is smooth on young trees, becoming flaky and ridged on older stems. Opposite leaves
are palm-sized, usually three-lobed (sometimes five), and with numous smallish teeth. Twigs are
stouter than in sugar maple and winter buds are larger. One of the earliest-blooming trees, the
winged seeds are fingertip sized and red. This species has less valuable wood and can be
tapped for syrup, but the sap has a much lower sugar content than does sugar maple. Red maple
is an early invader of distrubed sites.
- Striped maple (Acer pennsylvanicum) is also called moosewood. The opposite leaves are three-lobed,
larger than hand-sized, and toothed on the margins. It is a small understory tree with dark bark
vertically striped in white.
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- American basswood (Tilia americana) is also called linden, though that name is more often
applied to Euporean species. Leaves are alternate, toothed, hand-sized and unequally heart-shaped
at the base. The fruit is distinctive with a leaf-like sail attached to a stemmed nut. Bark is
smooth on young trees becoming thicker and furrowed into scaly ridges on older trunks.
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This group is among the few broad-leaved evergreens in our area. All have narrow alternate leaves
with untoothed margins. Rhododendron leaves are leathery and up to hand-length. Laurel leaves
are smaller and less leathery.
- Rhododendron (Rhododendron maximum) is also know as great laurel, or rosebay. It can reach
the height of 40 feet, but that is rare. It's leaves are leathery and it's stems thick. Flowers
are a showy rose to white. Found in low woods and along streams in our area.
- Mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) is a shrub with very stiff, squarish twigs. Rarely a small
tree. Some leaves are opposite or in threes and are one to five inches long and narrow. Flowers
pink to white and showy. Found in sandy or rocky soil in woods.
- Two other laurels might be found in our area in wetlands. Kalmia polifolia is called swamp
laurel, Kalmia angustifolia is called sheep-laurel, lamb-kill, calf-kill, kill-kid, sheep-poison,
and a few others. Guess you better not eat it - or anything else you don't recognize for certain as
harmless.
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- Blueberries (Vaccinium) are shrubs or small trees with alternate, sometimes leathery leaves
and small white, pink, or red flowers. The fruits are a many-seeded berry, some of which
are popular food items with humans as well as with wildlife. Look for shrubs with generally
lance-shaped to oval leaves and down-pointing tubular flowers.
- Cranberries (Viburnum) are actually members of the honeysuckle group. Most have vaguely
maple-shaped leaves and clusters of red fruit.
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Ashes have opposite, compound leafs. That means no buds at the stem base of the leaflets, only at
the base of the stem of the whole leaf. Two are important here.
- White ash (Fraxinus americana) is a medium to large trees found in moist sites. Leaflets have
stems. Flowers appear before or with leaves. Bark thick, gray, fishered into ridged surrounding
diamond-shaped open areas. Takes some practice to feel the shapes.
- Black ash (Fraxinus nigra) is also called brown ash. It is a medium-sized tree and grows in
wet areas. The bark is more scaly than ridged. Leaflets grow directly from the central stem
without any stems of their own. This plant is used in making the highest quality native
baskets. They can be very expensive, but are very good, very decorative baskets. Just feeling
the texture of them will give you a hint as to how good they are.
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These are opposite-leaved shrubs, rarely growing more than head high. The dogwoods have
untoothed leaves with the veins running parallel to the outside of the leaf. Feel carefully.
Viburnums have mainly toothed leaf margins and branching veins like most other shrubs and
trees. Many viburnums, including cranberries, have vaguely maple-like leaves. Others may
be heart-shaped or long. If you find a shrub or small tree with opposite leaves (or an arrangement
so obscure that you can't really tell), it is probably a viburnum or dogwood. Both groups produce
small fruits in clusters.
- Hobblebush (Viburnum alnifolium) has heart-shaped leaves and irregular branches. It's white
flowers come while the woods are still pretty bare. It is the predominent viburnum in our
area. Check for the leaf shapes and the opposite arrangement.
- Alternate-leaf dogwood (Cornus alternafolia) is the exception. The leaves are actually
alternate or not quite opposite, but are clustered so close to the end of the twig it is
hard to tell. It can be a small tree and is found in the understory of forests.
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Some elderberries are good to eat and some aren't. All have thin, papery compound leaves growing
opposite on the twig and clusters of flowers followed by fruit. There are two shrubby types in our area.
- American elder (Sambucus canadensis) grows in moist soil, has purple fruits with medicinal
properties, and leaves have a heavy scent when crushed. Opposite, papery leaves with scent are
the major key here.
- Red elder (Sambucus racemosa) is definately one of the ones that is NOT good to eat. One name
in Maine is poison-elder. It resembles the other but has red fruit and grows in rocky places. It
is not reported as having the heavy scent.
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