Everything about Populus Alba totally explained
Populus alba (
White Poplar) is a species of
poplar, most closely related to the
aspens (
Populus sect.
Populus). It is native from
Spain and
Morocco through central
Europe (north to
Germany and
Poland) to central
Asia. It grows in moist sites, often by watersides, in regions with hot summers and cold to mild winters.
It is a medium-sized
deciduous tree, growing to heights of up to 16-27 m (rarely more), with a trunk up to 1 m diameter and a broad rounded crown. The
bark is smooth and greenish-white to greyish-white with characteristic diamond-shaped dark marks on young trees, becoming blackish and fissured at the base of old trees. The young shoots are covered with whitish-grey down, including the small buds. The
leaves are 4-15 cm long, five-lobed, with a thick covering of white scurfy down on both sides but thicker underneath; this layer wears off the upper side but not the lower, which stays white until autumn leaf fall. Larger, deeply lobed leaves are produced on fast-growing young trees, and smaller, less deeply lobed leaves on older, slow-growing trees. The
flowers are
catkins up to 8 cm long, produced in early spring; they're
dioecious, with male and female catkins on separate trees; the male catkins are grey with conspicuous dark red stamens, the female catkins are greyish-green. The female catkins lengthen to 8–10 cm after pollination, with several green seed capsules, maturing in late spring to early summer. It also propagates by means of
root suckers growing from the lateral roots, often as far as 20-30 m from the trunk, to form extensive
clonal colonies.
White Poplar hybridises with the closely related Common Aspen
Populus tremula; the resulting
hybrid, known as
Grey Poplar (
Populus × canescens), is intermediate between its parents, with a thin grey downy coating on the leaves, which are also much less deeply lobed than White Poplar leaves. It is a very vigorous tree with marked
hybrid vigour, reaching 40 m tall and over 1.5 m trunk diameter (much larger than either of its parents). Most Grey Poplars in cultivation are male, but female clones are occasionally found.
The majority of White Poplars in cultivation in northern Europe are female trees.
In intensive forest management it's being replaced by various
cottonwood hybrids. The wood is soft, and used to make cellulose and for cheap boxes.
A conical
cultivar from
Turkestan,
Populus alba 'Pyramidalis' (Bolle's Poplar; syn.
Populus bolleana) is sometimes planted in parks.
[
]History
An old English name "Abele", now rarely used, is derived from the Latin albellus, white, by way of Old French aubel and Low German name abeel.[
According to ancient mythology the White Poplar was consecrated to Hercules because he destroyed Cacus in a cavern adjoining the Aventine Hill, which was covered with these trees; and in the moment of his triumph he bound his brows with a branch of White Poplar as a token of his victory. Persons offering sacrifices to Hercules were always crowned with branches of this tree; and all who had gloriously conquered their enemies in battle wore garlands of it, in imitation of Hercules. Homer in the "Iliad" compares the fall of Simoisius when killed by Ajax to that of a poplar. ]
Ovid mentions that Paris had carved the name of Ænone on a poplar, as Shakespeare makes Orlando carve the name of Rosalind upon the trees of the forest of Arden.
Virgil gives directions for the culture of this tree and Horace speaks of the White Poplar as delighting to grow on the banks of rivers.[Further Information]
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