Champion Information:
Height (Ft): 79
Circumference (In): 314
Average Crown Spread (Ft): 80
Total Points: 413
Nominator Name: Donald Oakes
Location: Malheur County
Species Information:
Uses
Industry: Wood of narrow-leaf cottonwood is susceptible to decay and warps when cut into lumber. Because of this and its relative scarcity, it is commercially unimportant – used mostly for fenceposts and fuel, less commonly for crating, boxes, pallets, plywood veneer, and pulpwood; wood shavings are used for bedding, insulation, and animal food supplements.
Wildlife: Narrow-leaf cottonwood provides habitat, cover, and food for a
diversity of wildlife. Common residents
include squirrels, aquatic fur bearers, bears, white-tailed deer, and many bird
species. Twigs and leaves are browsed by
rabbits, deer, and moose and buds and catkins are eaten by quail and
grouse. Beaver cut all sizes of
cottonwoods to build and maintain lodges and dams and use the bark for
immediate food or storage in winter caches.
Conservation: Narrow-leaf cottonwood is planted as a fast-growing ornamental tree in
western US
cities. These trees can be used at high
elevations and are useful in landscaping on deer winter ranges since deer will
not damage them through overbrowsing.
The species was early encountered (in1805) by the Lewis and Clark
expedition, who observed that horses would not eat it.
The aggressively
spreading root system of narrow-leaf cottonwood makes it useful for soil
stabilization in erosion control and streambank reclamation projects. This same feature, however, may be a
liability in urban areas where the roots may clog drains and sewers.
Ethnobotanic: Native Americans used young cottonwood shoots to make baskets.
Status
Please consult the PLANTS Web site and your State Department of Natural Resources for this plant’s current status, such as, state noxious status and wetland indicator values.
Description
General: Willow Family (Salicaceae). Native trees up to 15-20 m tall, single-stemmed with slender, upright branches forming a narrowly spreading crown. The bark is yellowish green to grayish brown, smooth on upper portions and furrowed into broad, flat ridges on older lower portions. Leaves are deciduous, simple, alternate, lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, rounded at base, 5-9(-13) cm long, 1-2.5 cm wide, hairless or nearly so, the margins glandular-toothed, dark green above and slightly paler beneath, turning dull yellow in autumn, the petioles less than 15 mm long, about 1/3 as long as the blade, flattened only near the base. Flowers male (staminate) and female (pistillate), are on separate trees (the species dioecious). Each type is borne in pendent catkins, the female elongating to 6-8 cm long. Fruits are ovoid, pointed capsules 6-8 mm long, splitting to release the seeds; seeds 2-3 mm long, each with a tuft of long, white, silky hairs (“cotton”), easily blown by the wind. The common name is in reference to the slender leaves.
Distribution
Narrow-leaf cottonwood occurs primarily in mountainous areas from southern Alberta and Saskatchewan south to Oregon and California (east of the Sierra Nevada), Arizona, New Mexico, and Trans-Pecos Texas and in northern Mexico (northeastern Sonora). For current distribution, please consult the Plant Profile page for this species on the PLANTS Web site.
Adaptation
Narrow-leaf cottonwood grows along streambanks in dry mountains, desert shrublands, and prairie grasslands and in coniferous forests with willows and alders, at elevations of 900-2450 meters. It is commonly found on narrow, periodically flooded benches adjacent to streams and smaller rivers. Common associates are Douglas-fir, blue spruce, ponderosa pine, Rocky Mountain juniper, maples, birches, alders, other cottonwoods and aspen; in relatively undisturbed sites, the understory often includes red-osier dogwood, chokecherry, serviceberry, willows, and currants.
Narrow-leaf cottonwood
is a pioneer that colonizes sandbars and other fresh alluvium in areas of full
sun. Such sites tend to become dominated
by a dense, closed canopy of cottonwood.
Continual disturbances such as flood and fire allow such communities to
persist.
This species flowers
in May, before or during leaf emergence and fruits May-July, with seed
dispersal in June-July.
Establishment
Flowering begins at about 15 years in narrow-leaf cottonwood. Male and female trees must be grown in proximity if seed is desired. Large seed crops are produced each year but seeds are viable for probably no more than 3 weeks. They establish only if they land on unoccupied, wet, sandy soil in full sun. Flood disturbance along waterways enhances seedling recruitment, and periodic fires may serve the same purpose – removing competing conifers, allowing more light penetration, and exposing mineral soil. Narrow-leaf cottonwood is a fast-growig but short-lived species in natural conditions.
Narrow-leaf cottonwood
reproduces vegetatively by sprouting from roots and stumps.
Management
Because of its short period of viability, seed needs to be sown within a few days of ripening in the spring. Otherwise they may be kept viable by drying and storing cold in an airtight container. In a cold frame, sow on the surface or lightly cover the seeds. Plant into permanent positions either in late summer or the following spring, depending on growth of the young plants.
Cuttings of twigs
20–45 cm long and 1-3 cm diameter of the current season's growth, taken during
the dormant season, can be placed in a sheltered outdoor bed or directly into
permanent positions. Initial growth of
un-rooted cuttings may not be as rapid as that of rooted cuttings. Cuttings grown in a mist-propagator also root
easily and survive potting. Nursery- or
container-grown seedlings and rooted cuttings establish easily and grow rapidly
on moist well-drained soils in full sun.
Growth may be minimal on wet soils and upland sites.
Beaver activities may
inhibit cottonwood regeneration; seedlings and saplings are stripped of bark
for food and larger trees are cut for building material. Poorly oxygenated water in stagnant ponds
causes a decline in health. Severe
grazing by livestock, and associated trampling of seedlings, reduces cottonwood
regeneration potential.
The aggressive root
systems can invade and damage drainage systems and also may heavily draw
available moisture from gardens and building foundations, especially in clay
soil. Root suckers also may be
considered a maintenance problem, and the profuse production of cottony seed
from female plants can be a minor nuisance.
Narrow-leaf cottonwood
will produce stump sprouts and root suckers after light to moderate intensity
fires. Seedlings, saplings, and young
trees are damaged or killed by fire, but they develop more fire-resistant bark
after 15-20 years of age. Older trees
may be killed by even relatively cool fires, which wound trees and open the way
to heartwood decay. Where spruce is
climax, periodic fire may contribute to the maintenance of cottonwood stands,
but mature bottomland hardwood stands will not persist in the face of fire.
From Plant Database: www.plants.usda.gov