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  2. Catkin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catkin

    Catkin-bearing plants include many trees or shrubs such as birch, willow, aspen, hickory, sweet chestnut, and sweetfern (Comptonia). [citation needed]In many of these plants, only the male flowers form catkins, and the female flowers are single (hazel, oak), a cone (), or other types ().

  3. Birch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch

    The flowers are monoecious, and open with or before the leaves. Once fully grown, these leaves [clarification needed] are usually 3–6 millimetres (1 ⁄ 8 – 1 ⁄ 4 in) long on three-flowered clusters in the axils of the scales of drooping or erect catkins or aments. Staminate catkins are pendulous, clustered, or solitary in the axils of ...

  4. Betulaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betulaceae

    Betulaceae flowers are monoecious, meaning that they have both male and female flowers on the same tree. Their flowers present as catkins and are small and inconspicuous, often with reduced perianth parts. These flowers have large feathery stamen and produce a high volume of pollen, as they rely on wind pollination.

  5. Hornbeam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornbeam

    As with other members of the birch family, hornbeam flowers are wind-pollinated pendulous catkins, produced in spring. Male and female flowers are on separate catkins, but on the same tree . Female flowers give way to distinctive clusters of winged seeds that somewhat resemble the hops-like seeds of ironwood. [6]

  6. List of Betula species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Betula_species

    Betula nigra - River birch or black birch; Betula potaninii - Potanin's birch; Tetraploid (4n = 56). Betula albosinensis - Chinese red birch Betula albosinensis var. septentrionalis - North Chinese red birch; Betula ermanii - Erman's birch; Betula jacquemontii (B. utilis subsp. jacquemontii) - White-barked Himalayan birch; Betula utilis ...

  7. Ostrya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ostrya

    They have alternate and double-toothed birch-like leaves 3–10 cm long. The flowers are produced in spring, with male catkins 5–10 cm long and female aments 2–5 cm long. The fruit form in pendulous clusters 3–8 cm long with 6–20 seeds; each seed is a small nut 2–4 mm long, fully enclosed in a bladder-like involucre. [2]

  8. Corylus avellana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corylus_avellana

    Corylus avellana, the common hazel, is a species of flowering plant in the birch family Betulaceae. The shrubs usually grow 3–8 metres (10–26 feet) tall. The nut is round, in contrast to the longer filbert nut. Common hazel is native to Europe and Western Asia. The species is mainly cultivated for its nuts.

  9. Betula alleghaniensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betula_alleghaniensis

    Betula alleghaniensis, forest emblem of Quebec, [6] Canada. Betula alleghaniensis is a medium-sized, typically single-stemmed, deciduous tree reaching 60–80 feet (18–24 m) tall (exceptionally to 100 ft (30 m)) [2] [7] with a trunk typically 2–3 ft (0.61–0.91 m) in diameter, making it the largest North American species of birch.