Betula medwedewii – Transcaucasian Birch – Birch –

Description

Betula – Birch –

There are about 60 species of deciduous tall to medium sized trees and shrubs, which growth is initially fast, in this genus.  They occur in diverse habitats, including woodland, moors, mountains, and heathland, throughout the Northern Hemisphere including arctic zones.  They produce alternate serrated, usually ovate, mid to dark green leaves.  Male and female flowers are borne in separate catkins on the same plant in spring, the male catkins are usually yellow-brown, pendent, and longer than the females, which are erect at first, becoming pendent.  Birches are grown for their ornamental bark (glossy white or brown and/or peels off in paper like strips), colorful autumn foliage (usually gold), attractive male catkins, and graceful, open habit.  Many are suitable for a small garden, either as isolated specimens or in small groups.  They are usually shallow rooted.  Bark was once used as paper by Ancient Buddhist and timber as use in the furniture trade.  Sap and leaves are used medicinally as food or drink an as a dye

Grow in moderately fertile, moist but well drained soil in full sun or light dappled shade, but some adapt to poorer, shallower, even boggy soil.

Prone to various fungi including armillaria mealea and piptoporus betulinus that cause twig dieback.  Also affected by leaf spots, viruses, anthracnose, rust, wood rooting fungi, borers (especially bronze birch borer), leaf miners, aphids, skeletonizers, leaf hoppers, caterpillars, gypsy moth larvae.

B. medwedewii – Transcaucasian Birch – This compact shrub from the Caucasus, Northwestern Iran and Northeastern Turkey grows 15′ feet tall and wide. It has brown bark that peels a little. From upright branches that become spreading with age carry ovate to elliptic, deep green leaves with paler undersides and serrated edges, to 4″ long, turn yellow to yellow-brown in autumn.  In spring it bears yellow-brown pendulous catkins to 4″ long.

Zones 5-8