Populus tremuloides (species)

Esquema

Getty AAT: Living organisms

Jerarquía

Eukaryota (domain) > Plantae (kingdom) > Angiospermae (division) > Magnoliopsida (class) > Malpighiales (order) > Salicaceae (family) > Populus (genus)

Descripción

Species of tall, fast-growing tree native to cooler areas of North America. The name refers to the tendency of leaves to tremble or quake in even a slight breeze due to their flattened petioles. It is most easily distinguished from a similar European species, P. tremula, by the shape of its leaves, which have more pointed tips, and by growing via root suckers: it propagates itself primarily through root sprouts, and extensive clonal colonies are common. The leaves are food for various insects. A substance in the bark was extracted by Native Americans and the pioneers of the American West as a quinine substitute. The soft, weak wood is used as paper pulp and for other purposes.

URI original del concepto

http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300375462

Otros términos

  • American aspen (species) [en]
  • American quaking aspen (species) [en]
  • quaking aspen (American, species) [en]
  • American poplar (species) [en]
  • peuplier faux-tremble (d'Amérique, species) [fr]
  • tremble (d'Amérique, species) [fr]
  • tremble d'Amérique (species) [fr]
  • álamo temblón (P. trepida, species) [es]
  • amerikanische Espe (species) [de]