Native plants for wetlands, fields or forests and an eclectic mix of other botanic delights

Alnus incana subsp. rugosa

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Status
Out Of Stock
Rough Alder
A small, fast growing, multi-stemmed tree
Mature Size:
' Height /
' Spread
Expected Size:
15'-25'
/
15'-25'
Light Preference:
Sun to Part Sun
Soil Preference:
Moist (Mesic)
Price:
$10.50/1 gal.; $18.50/2 gal. (4'-5')

Alnus incana subspecies rugosa, synonymous with and formerly known as Alnus rugosa, is a fast-growing, thicket forming, deciduous, spreading small tree or shrub that is native to wet sandy or gravelly soils, often along the peripheries of lakes, ponds, streams, rivers and swamps, from Hudson Bay to Newfoundland south to Minnesota, Michigan and Virginia. Rough alder is most often seen in a multi-trunked form to 15-25' tall with a broad-rounded irregular crown, but infrequently will soar to as much as 50-60' tall. It is commonly called speckled alder because of the white warty lenticils (pores) that speckle the bark. Flowers are monoecious (separate male and female flowers on the same tree), appearing in catkins in March-early April before the leaves emerge. Male catkins (flowers purplish-brown with yellow pollen) are slender, cylindrical and droop to 1 1/2" long. Female catkins (flowers green) are rounded (to 1/2") and clustered on stalks. Female catkins are followed by 1-inch long fruiting cones (strobiles) composed of winged seeds. These fruiting cones mature to reddish-brown in fall with persistence into winter, resemble small pine cones and are attractive to birds. Female flowers are pollinated by wind. Leathery dull green leaves (2-4" long) with wrinkled surfaces and red-hairy undersides are wedge-shaped at the base and pointed at the tip with doubly serrate margins. Insignificant fall color. Root nodules fix nitrogen.  Alnus incana subsp. rugosa is very similar in appearance to Alnus serrulata (smooth alder or hazel alder). Rugosa means wrinkled in reference to sunken veins on lower leaf surfaces.

The genus name is the Latin name for alder.

The specific epithet means gray or hoary in reference to leaf color.

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Information

Prices listed are subject to change, based upon size change and availability.

We are a small local nursery with limited shipping capability. We will do our best to ship smaller material (usually 1 or 2 gallon), although we can sometimes ship larger plants with the pots removed.

We have some species that are not listed, as we have too few of them to make a full listing plausible. You can always inquire.

We will consider contract growing an order with appropriate advance notice and availability of seed, cuttings or lining out stock.

Summer Business Hours
Monday
10- 6
Tuesday
10- 6
Wednesday
By Appointment
Thursday
10 - 6
Friday
10 - 5
Saturday
10 - 4
Sunday
By Appointment
Kollar Nursery | 5200 West Heaps Road, Pylesville, MD 21132 | 410.836.0500
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