Balsam poplar - Sierra Club BC
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Balsam poplar

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Balsam poplar

Populus balsamifera

APPEARANCE

Balsam poplars can be up to 30 metres tall. They have catkin flowers and grey, wrinkled bark that becomes smooth and yellow-white near the top.

RANGE & HABITAT

These trees often grow on the eastern slopes of hillsides. They thrive in moist soils near rivers or floodplains, but they can also grow in rocky soils. You can find them from coast to coast across the northern part of North America.

Reciprocal Relationships

The balsam poplar is an important forest community member! Bees use the sticky and fragrant resin from balsam buds to make propolis (a sticky substance they use to seal up any cracks in their hives). Many kinds of wildlife eat the twigs for food, but balsam poplars produce a chemical that deters snowshoe hares from eating twigs and young trees! 

The bark and sap of this tree contains Salicin. This is used by First Nations as an anti-inflammatory and to treat symptoms of illness. The First Nation Gwich’in peoples would burn or boil the bark of these trees to feed to dogs. This would help control worms!  

Status

COSEWIC: Not Reported 
CDC: Not Reported 

MORE INFORMATION 

If you belong to a First Nation with a story or piece of information not represented here and you would like to share more about this species, please email us at education@sierraclub.bc.ca. 

Photo Credit

Canva

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