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Weed Identification in Christmas Trees

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Common cottonwood - Populus deltoides Marshall
Home > common cottonwood
Common cottonwood seedling Common cottonwood seeds
Common cottonwood seedling. Mass of common cottonwood seeds.
Common cottonwood leaf glands Common cottonwood leaf
Glands on upper leaf surface of common cottonwood. Common cottonwood leaf.
Common cottonwood tree
Common cottonwood tree.
Life cycle: Fast-growing, weedy tree.

Leaves: Alternate, simple, broadly triangular, 3 to 5 inches long with coarse, incurved-toothed margins and a smooth base. Leaves are shiny green above and have two to five prominent, fingerlike glands where the long, flattened petiole attaches to the leaf. Margins are outlined by a colorless border.

Stems: Up to 100 feet at maturity with a straight trunk and minimal branching. Bark is ash gray on mature trees and greenish yellow on young stems. Plants have the ability to form many vigorous, weedy sprouts.

Flowers and fruit: Male and female flowers are found on separate plants and are clustered in drooping, up to 4-inch-long spikes. Male flowers are reddish; female flowers are greenish. Fruit are three- to four-valved capsules that release cottony, wind-disseminated seeds.

Reproduction: Seeds.
 
The MSU IPM Program maintains this site as an access point to pest management information at MSU. The IPM Program is administered within the Department of Entomology, fueled by research from the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station, delivered to citizens through MSU Extension, and proud to be a part of Project GREEEN.
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02/07/08