water birch Betulaceae Betula occidentalis Hook. Listen to the Latin   symbol: BEOC2
Other Fact Sheets
Leaf: Alternate, simple, deciduous, ovate to diamond-shaped, 3/4 to 2 inches long, yellow-green above and initially sticky but becoming smooth, paler and glandular below. Margins distinctly serrated or doubly serrated, except near the base.
Flower: Species is monoecious; with both sexes borne in aments (catkins), male aments preformed and clustered, female aments usually solitary.

Fruit: A cylindrical papery strobile (cone) that disintegrates at maturity, 1 inch long, seeds are tiny winged nutlets.

Twig: Young twigs are green and sticky, but turn reddish brown and resin-dotted, eventually turn gray-brown and smooth.

Bark: Thin and smooth, but dotted with conspicuous lenticles, almost black when young, but turning reddish brown to copper-colored as it ages, older bark may loosen and curl but does not exfoliate.

Form: A loosely branched deciduous shrub or small tree growing to 40 feet tall and 1 foot in diameter.
 
Looks like: paper birch
USDAFS Additional Silvics - USDA Plants Database
Betula occidentalis is native to North America. Range may be expanded by planting. See states reporting water birch (opens a new window).

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