Paul Sterry

Collins Complete Guide to British Trees: A Photographic Guide to every common species


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water loss, many leaves have become reduced in size, such as the needles of firs and pines, or have thick waxy upper surfaces such as the glossy green leaves of hollies and magnolias. This reduces water loss to a minimum without impeding photosynthesis.

      The great variety of leaf shapes and sizes is an indication of the variety of ways in which trees can cope with environmental conditions. Some trees grow in areas where water is at a premium, so they have small leaves, to cut down on water loss through their thin skins. Some grow in shady conditions, so they may have larger leaves that can trap the maximum amount of light energy. Some trees are subject to grazing by animals, so their leaves are spiny or prickly, or protected on tough, thorny stems.

       Beech

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       OVAL AND ENTIRE

       Hornbeam

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       ELLIPTICAL AND TOOTHED

       Small-leaved Lime

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       CORDATE

       Red Oak

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       LOBED

       Horse-chestnut

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       PALMATE

       White Ash

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       COMPOUND

       Yew

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       NEEDLE-LIKE

       Scots Pine

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       WITH PAIRED NEEDLES

       Leaf types.

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       Deciduous trees, such as Horse-chestnut, produce fresh leaves each spring, which burst forth from buds.

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       Autumn leaf colour is spectacular in many maple species: as chlorophyll and other pigments are withdrawn, remaining red pigments prevail.

      Evergreen trees do not lose all their leaves at the end of every growing season; most leaves remain on the tree through the winter, although there is always some loss and some replacement. In many of the pines, for example, the needles will remain on the tree for about 3 years. As the shoot grows longer each year, a new set of needles grows on the tip of the lengthening shoot. The older needles, finding themselves further and further away from the tip, gradually fall off. Small leaf scars remain, and these are quite distinctive in some species and may be a useful aid to identification. Broadleaved trees such as Holly also replace their leaves gradually so there is always some leaf-fall, but plenty of green foliage remains on the tree.

      Deciduous trees generally shed all their leaves at the end of the growing season, before the onset of winter. Many of them produce spectacular displays of colour before the leaves finally fall. These colour changes are the result of the gradual withdrawal back into the tree of all the useful materials in the leaf; as the various pigments are removed the leaf itself changes colour until finally a corky layer, called the abscission layer, grows at the base of the petiole or leaf stalk. This seals off the shoot and when the leaf finally falls, a scar is left through which mould spores and other harmful materials are unable to pass. The twigs of Horse-chestnut have very distinctive leaf scars that look like tiny horseshoes. If these are examined carefully through a hand-lens, the sealed-off ends of the vessels that conducted materials in and out of the leaves can clearly be seen.

      There may be as many as 250,000 leaves on a mature oak tree, whilst a large spruce probably has 10 times as many, in the form of needles. The oak’s leaves will be shed at the end of the growing season, adding to the rich accumulation on the ground beneath it, whilst the spruce’s needles will be shed and replaced gradually, each individual needle remaining on the tree for about 4 years.

      REPRODUCTION

      Trees normally produce flowers when they are several years old. Beech, for example, produces its first flowers at around 30 years old, repeating the process each spring for the next 200 years if it remains healthy. Some trees, such as apples or oaks, have years in which they produce a large crop of fruits or seeds, followed by other years with hardly any, whilst other species, such as some maples, produce a good seed crop year after year.

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       Even a slight breeze will liberate pollen from the male catkins of Hazel

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       Carry it to female flowers.

      Some trees and shrubs produce conspicuous flowers to attract pollinating insects, something that, in ornamental trees, we also find attractive. Honey Bees are particularly important pollinators, but numerous other insects visit the flowers for nectar and pollen. Many flowering trees have also long been prized by gardeners for their scent.

      Many trees are pollinated by the wind. Their flowers are less conspicuous, often taking the form of catkins, which are pendulous and usually open before the leaves so that nothing impedes the free movement of the pollen grains. Wind-pollinated flowers normally have flowers of separate sexes, the males usually being larger and more abundant. Many wind-pollinated trees are such prolific producers of pollen that on warm breezy days in spring clouds of pollen can sometimes be seen blowing from the trees.

      Conifer flowers are either male or female, and borne on the same or different trees. There are no petals, but some of the flowers are still quite colourful and decorative. Male flowers are short-lived, falling off after they have released clouds of pollen, but the female flowers, often covered with brightly coloured scales, remain on the tree after pollination and develop into cones containing the seeds. They rely on the wind for pollination and also for seed dispersal. A few close relatives of the conifers, such as the yews, produce fleshy fruits instead of cones.

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       Mature cones open and close in response to temperature and humidity, releasing seeds in hot, dry conditions.

      The flowers of broadleaved trees and shrubs are usually hermaphrodite, containing both male and female parts, but there are a number of exceptions. Both sexes usually have petals in some form or other and they may also be scented. Small flowers are often grouped together in larger clusters to help attract pollinating insects. Some are wind-pollinated and open early in the year before the leaves, but insect-pollinated