Also known as common alder, black alder, European alder, European black alder, alder
species of plant
Alnus glutinosa, commonly known as black alder, is a tree species native to Europe, western Asia, and North Africa that typically grows in wet environments like riverbanks and marshes. It plays an important ecological role by improving soil quality through a symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing bacteria, making it valuable for both natural ecosystems and land management projects.
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SPECIES
二名法 Alnus glutinosa(L.) Gaertn.(英语:Joseph Gaertner) 本条目可参照外語維基百科相應條目来扩充。(2017年5月14日) 若您熟悉来源语言和主题,请协助参考外语维基扩充条目。请勿直接提交机械翻译,也不要翻译不可靠、低品质内容。依版权协议,译文需在编辑摘要注明来源,或于讨论页顶部标记{{Translated page}}标签。 普通赤楊(学名:Alnus glutinosa)是樺木科赤楊屬的落叶乔木,主要分布于欧洲、亚洲西南部和非洲北部。普通赤杨喜潮湿,在存在Frankia alni(英语:Frankia alni)细菌的情况下可在贫瘠的土壤中生长。它是中等大小、生命短暂的树木,大约能长到30米(98英尺)。 参考资料 ^ Participants of the FFI/IUCN SSC Central Asian regional tree Red Listing workshop, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (2006年7月11日-13日). Alnus glutinosa. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2014.2. International Union for Conservation of Nature. 2007 [2014-10-08]. ^ Alnus glutinosa. World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. [2014-08-31]. 取自“https://zh.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=普通赤杨&oldid=44354278” 分类: IUCN无危物种 赤楊屬 落葉植物 乔木 隐藏分类: CS1含有外文文本 TaxoboxLatinName 本地相关图片与维基数据不同 自2017年5月需要從外語維基百科翻譯的條目 需要從外語維基百科翻譯的條目 含有拉丁語的條目
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Alnus glutinosa, the common alder, black alder, European alder, European black alder, or just alder, is a species of tree in the family Betulaceae, native to most of Europe, southwest Asia and northern Africa. It thrives in wet locations where its association with the bacterium Frankia alni enables it to grow in poor quality soils. It is a medium-sized, short-lived tree growing to a height of up to 30 metres (98 feet). It has short-stalked rounded leaves and separate male and female flowers in the form of catkins. The small, rounded fruits are cone-like and the seeds are dispersed by wind and water.
The common alder provides food and shelter for wildlife, with a number of insects, lichens and fungi being completely dependent on the tree. It is a pioneer species, colonising vacant land and forming mixed forests as other trees appear in its wake. Eventually common alder dies out of woodlands because the seedlings need more light than is available on the forest floor. Its more usual habitat is forest edges, swamps and riverside corridors. The timber has been used in underwater foundations and for manufacture of paper and fibreboard, for smoking foods, for joinery, turnery and carving. Products of the tree have been used in ethnobotany, providing folk remedies for various ailments, and research has shown that extracts of the seeds are active against pathogenic bacteria.
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via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).