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Identifying Aspen

Aspen has a very wide distribution, being found from Scandinavia to North Africa, and across most of Europe. It is more common in the north of Britain than the south.

Like Birch, Alder, and Mountain Ash, Aspen is a pioneer species – that is to say it is one of the first to colonise an area of open ground in a wood or forest.

In many areas, Aspen reproduces mainly vegetatively or asexually by means of suckers or ramets. These are shoots produced by old roots. As Aspen has an extensive root system, ramets may appear 40 yards away from the parent tree. All the trees in an area may be joined together through the root system, and are in consequence clones (a group of genetically identical organisms). They are therefore all the same sex, and come into flower and leaf at the same time. The number of ramets produced after a fire can be prodigious (up to 70,000 per hectare!).

Aspen leaf

Leaf

The leaves are usually rounded (though there is a point at the leaf apex), with a few ‘rounded’ teeth on the margin. The main veins stand out, sometimes having a white or creamy colour. On young suckers (ramets), the leaves may be more triangular in shape. The petioles are unusual as they are quite long and have a somewhat flattened or compressed appearance in cross section. They are also flexible near to the lamina or leaf blade; this means that the gentlest breeze causes the leaves to flutter (hence its specific name – tremula). In Spring, when the leaves open they have a browny-copper colour.

Aspen bark

Buds, Bark and Stem

The bark is grey or green grey in colour, sometimes pitted or roughened by the presence of lenticels. The image to the left shows young bark on the left and old bark on the right.

Flowers and Fruits

Aspen is dioecious: trees are either male or female and produce their flowers or catkins in March or April, before the leaves appear. Fertilised female catkins ripen during the summer and release minute seeds, which have small hairs or tufts.

Winter Twigs

Aspen twig

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