White Birch
Other names
Paper Birch, Canoe Birch
Growth habit
Tree
Perennation
Long-lived polycarpic perennial
Native distribution
Native to the Finger Lakes Region, Labrador to B.C. and WA, South to PA, MI, NE and MT
Location
Mundy Wildflower Garden, Cornell Class of 1938 Native Maple Slope
Source of plant
Moses Nurseries, Edgewood Nursery, Schichtel's Nursery
Description
Loosely pyramidal in youth, developing an irregular, oval to rounded crown at maturity, usually maintaining its branches close to the ground unless limbed up. Plants 50' to 70' tall with spread equal to 1/2 to 2/3's the height. Fall color excellent clear yellow. Bark thin, smooth, reddish brown on young branches, becoming creamy-white in the third to fourth year, perhaps the whitest of all the birches; peels freely to expose a reddish-orange inner bark; old trunks become marked with black.
USDA Hardiness Zone
2
Special characteristics
fall color, bark, winter interest
Status
L3|S5|G5