grey poplar, populus x canescens Stock Photo Alamy


Populus ×canescens 'Schubu' Populus ×canescens 'Schubu' Van den Berk Baumschulen

Populus × canescens, the grey poplar, is a hybrid between Populus alba (white poplar) and Populus tremula (common aspen). It is intermediate between its parents, with a thin grey downy coating on the leaves, which are also much less deeply lobed than the leaves of P. albus.


Populus ×canescens Peuplier grisard, Grisard Van den Berk Pépinières

Populus × canescens (Aiton) Sm. First published in Fl. Brit. 3: 1080 (1804) This hybrid is accepted The native range of this hybrid is Europe to Xinjiang. It is a tree and grows primarily in the temperate biome. The hybrid formula is P. alba × P. tremula. Taxonomy Images General information Distribution Synonyms Publications Other data Distribution


Grey Poplar (Populus x canescens) NEN Gallery

Populus × canescens grey poplar A large fast growing deciduous tree to a height of more than 30m, spreading or upright in habit, with dark green glossy leaves that are grey underneath. In early spring, red catkins appear on male trees, and rarely seen, green catkins on females Join the RHS today and save 25% Join now © visionspictures.com


grey poplar, populus x canescens Stock Photo Alamy

Populus x canescens 'Macrophylla' is one of the Gardens most prominent champion trees! This giant popular hybrid has stood by our pond since 1970. Sometimes known as 'Picart's Popular', this is a larger leaf form of the common variety and a lot taller growing.


Grey Poplar Populus x canescens (P. alba x tremula)

Populus × canescens, the grey poplar, is a hybrid between Populus alba (white poplar) and P. tremula (common aspen). It is intermediate between its parents, with a thin grey downy coating on the leaves, which are much less deeply lobed than the leaves of P. alba.


Grey Poplar Populus x canescens (P. alba x tremula)

This is a very vigorous and handsome poplar, which produces suckers freely, and grows well on most soils, including chalky ones. It is used for shelter and, in some parts of the world, for checking soil-erosion. Most modern authorities consider P. canescens to be a hybrid between P. alba and P. tremula.


GrauPappel (Populus x canescens) Habitus bestimmen GrauPappel

Towarz. Dendrol. 3: 30 (1930). Populus × hybrida Rchb., Icon. Fl. Germ. Helv. 21: 29 (1863), nom. illeg. Populus × juliana-pendula Dippel, Handb. Laubholzk. 2: 192 (1892). Populus × rogalinensis Wróbl., Rhodora 3: 30 (1930). Populus schischkinii Grossh., Bot. Zhurn.


Populus x canescens09 The Tree Library Flickr

Summary Bloom Color: Yellow. Main Bloom Time: Early spring, Late spring, Mid spring. Form: Oval. Physical Characteristics Populus x canescens is a deciduous Tree growing to 30 m (98ft) by 15 m (49ft) at a fast rate. See above for USDA hardiness. It is hardy to UK zone 4. It is in flower from February to March.


Grey Poplar (Populus x canescens, Populus canescens), leaves on a branch Stock Photo Alamy

Populus × canescens, the grey poplar, is a hybrid between Populus alba (white poplar) and P. tremula (common aspen). It is intermediate between its parents, with a thin grey downy coating on the leaves, which are much less deeply lobed than the leaves of P. alba.


Graupappel Populus x canescens Österreichische Baumfreunde

Return the soil to the planting area packing it firmly around the root ball. Fill the hole until the soil line is just at the base of the plant, where the roots begin to flare out from the main stem. Water the plant well then add a 2" (5cm) layer of mulch, such as shredded bark, around the planting area. Keep the mulch at least 4" (10cm.


Populus ×canescens 'Honthorpa' Populus ×canescens 'Honthorpa' Pepinierele Van den Berk

P. x canescens is a spreading to broadly columnar, suckering, deciduous tree with pale grey bark, triangular to ovate, dark green leaves, grey-downy beneath. Shorter shoots bear oval to rounded leaves, light green beneath. Leaves turn red, orange, and yellow in autumn. Red catkins bloom on male trees in early spring. Green, female catkins are rarely produced.


Canescens Del Populus X Del álamo Gris Árbol Con Los Ojos Foto de archivo Imagen de cruzado

Populus alba: Populus x canescens: Leaf size: Usually longer than 45 mm: Usually smaller, shorter than 40 mm: Leaf shape: 1-5 lobed and have more than 5 small, irregular, sharp, triangular teeth on each side. Lobes reduced to 4 or 5 coarse, broadly rounded teeth on each side. Underside of leaf


Tower Poplar (Populus x canescens 'Tower') in Ottawa Nepean Kanata Stittsville Gatineau Aylmer

P. x canescens is suitable for landscaped areas and as a solitary in parks and belts of trees. Prefers moist nutritious soils but also grows in drier less nutritious soil. It cannot take peaty or acid soils. Stands up well to (sea) wind. Specifications Height: 20 - 25 m, fast growing Crown: oval to round, irregular, half-open crown


Grey poplar (Populus x canescens) underside of leaves May 2018 YouTube

Populus × canescens Common name: Gray Poplar Pronunciation: pop-U-lus ka-NES-enz Family: Salicaceae Genus: Populus Type: Broadleaf Native to (or naturalized in) Oregon: No Deciduous tree, large tree, 40-70 ft (12-21 m); spreading.


Tree Populus x canescens Dương xám A tree lover blog!

General Information. Populus x canescens is a deciduous tree that can grow up to 30.00 metres tall. It is harvested from the wild for local use as a medicine and source of materials..


Gray Poplar 'Tower' (Populus x canescens) My Garden Life

Botanical details Family Salicaceae Native to the UK No Potentially harmful Genus Populus Genus description Populus are deciduous trees, mostly very fast-growing and large, with male and female catkins on separate trees, opening before the leaves. Male catkins are the more ornamental, female ones can be a nuisance from the cottony, wind-blown seeds