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Posted (edited)

Hi there,

 

First post for me and a call for assistance and opinions identifying Native Black Poplar (Populus nigra sbsp betulifolia).

 

I found (what I think is) a big old pair (going on 2m DBH and 150 years old at a guess) residing on the banks of a brook on the lowlands outside Taunton, both lapsed pollards. Normally when working in the field I assume I'm looking at hybrid black poplar, as its so common in the areas I frequent, and usually I'm right on closer inspection.

 

However this time, given the location, form, leaf shape and presence of the spiral gall (Pemphigus spyrothecae) I am leaning towards I.Ding as the rarer Native Black Poplar.

 

What gives me pause for thought is the presence of the spiral gall . This has been flagged in a number of documents I've read as a key way to identify native black poplar with trees apparently exhibiting the gall on the vast majority of leaves. However, on my specimens the gall is present on more like 20-30% of the leaves which left me wondering if this was in fact some sort of back crossed hybrid. Confusingly I've also found evidence that the galls can occur on hybrid black as well although not often.

 

I've included some pictures below (annoyingly the trees were on the opposite side of the brook,. on land I did not have access to otherwise I would have some closer pictures of live leaves). Suffice to say the leaf margins were not as deeply indented as hybrid black poplar but the leaf shape varied between triangular and ovoid diamond.

 

Any thoughts would be much appreciated!

 

Cheers,

 

JP

  .

59b26ceb42d30_SpiralGall.thumb.jpg.b89029b7c4d95ebeee8f2ef0d224fe2b.jpgFoliage.thumb.jpg.1374b152ac79072b1e19cb731b056076.jpgForm.thumb.jpg.dac540600a5a2af6b4904c9bc32ac573.jpg

 

 

 

Edited by JP Sanchez

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Posted

The trunk itself is normally a good identifier also.  True black poplar is particularly gnarly, has noticeably deeper ridges in the bark in my experience.  Any photos of the trunk close up or is the ivy obscuring it too much?

Posted

That's as close as I could get unfortunately as it was on private land I didn't have access to. Also, the "brook" separating me from the trees was about 10ft deep and 4m across, I'm not that good at jumping!

 

Bark was gnarly for sure but a closer look would have been nicer.

 

JP

Posted

A hairy petiole is a tip for BP's. The Forestry Commission(FC) have a distibution list following a survey some years ago. If they are BP's your local Nature Conservation Trust may have seen the trees before and asked the FC to plot them.

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