6 results for Alnus glutinosa (black alder)

Impact ID Scientific Name Impact Type Study Type Study Location Impact Description Geographic Location Reference
7824 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A While it is not considered a commercially valuable hardwood, Alnus glutinosa is kept by some US nurseries to meet the demand for use in orchards (as a windbreak) and at mine revegetation sites. 25067
7825 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A Alnus glutinosa (black alder) wood may be used for carving, and the leaves may be used for medicinal purposes. 703
7826 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A Black alder (Alnus glutinosa) acts as a significant source of nitrogen, which typically becomes available for other species and has been shown to increase growth in nearby trees. 25069
7827 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A For this reason, black alder (Alnus glutinosa) is sometimes recommended as a nurse crop (a species interplanted with the species of interest in order to assist in its growth) for numerous hardwood tree species. 25083
7828 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A When interplanted on coal mine reclamation sites, black alder's (Alnus glutinosa) presence was associated with the doubling in size of adjacent yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera), white ash (Fraxinus americana), and American sycamore (Plantanus occidentalis). 25062
7829 Alnus glutinosa Harvest Anecdotal N/A In a seven-year study of shale mining reclamation sites in Estonia, Alnus glutinosa stands showed high survival and productivity rates, as well as reduced soil pH and phosphorus concentration. 25058

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