The alder is a tree that is often found along the banks of rivers, which is no surprise as the wood is resistant to rotting in water. But this isn't the only interesting fact about alder as a genus, as it can also fix nitrogen in the soil.
It can fix nitrogen due to a symbiotic relationship with a bacteria called Frankia alni that lives within the roots of trees with the genus of Alnus, or alder. The bacteria absorbs the nitrogen from the air and in exchange for sugars, that the tree provides, it makes the nitrogen available to the tree. This nitrogen is also provided to the soil around the tree, which can make them useful as nurse trees.
There are many species of alder, around 35, along with a handful of cultivated varieties.
The flowers are wind pollinated catkins, with the males being pendulous and easily swayed by the wind. The female catkins are very small upright spikes and when looked at closely are slightly reminiscent of female hazel catkins. Flowering happens before the leaves appear, which of a common strategy for flowers that rely on wind for pollination. Additionally, both the male and female flowers occur on the same tree and neither have petals.
The photo above is an attempt at focus stacking a branch of alder. This shows last year's female catkins on the right, which are still on the tree despite having released the seeds. This is followed by this year's female catkins and male catkins.
Female catkin from the previous year. |
Female catkin from the current year. |
Male catkin. |
Resources:
Coombes, Allen J., and Zsolt Debreczy. The Book of Leaves: A Leaf-by-Leaf Guide to Six Hundred of the World’s Great Trees. S.l.: Ivy Press, 2015.
Hemery, Gabriel, and Sarah Simblet. The New Sylva: A Discourse of Forest and Orchard Trees for the Twenty-First Century. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014.
Alder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 2016. Alder - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. [ONLINE] Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alder#Classification. [Accessed 05 April 2016].
What a fascinating tree! Great photos, too. It seems highly specialized in its relationship with that particular bacteria.
ReplyDeleteThanks. It was interesting to read that this species of bacteria only interacts with this genus of tree. I guess alder species were common enough for it to make evolutionary sense.
DeleteNeat to learn more about alders--we have them here, along streams. The bacteria story is wonderful. So much goes on underground, as we're learning. And I suspect we still have a LOT to learn, many surprises await!
ReplyDeleteI reckon you're right, Hollis. I think over the next decade we'll learn a lot more about relationships and communities underground that we'd never have expected. It's an exciting time :)
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