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			British Columbia Outdoor Wilderness Guide               |   
    
			
 
 
                   
                     
                       
                        
                            
                             
                            PAPER BIRCH 
                            betula papyrifera  
                            
                              - The 
                                Paper Birch is also known as Canoe Birch, Silver 
                                Birch, White Birch  
                              
 - 'papyrifera' 
                                means "paper bearing" and refers to the bark  
                            
  
                           
                           
                           UNIQUE 
                            FEATURES:  
                            
                            
                              - Paper 
                                Birch is a small to medium sized tree, with many 
                                stems  
                              
 - Paper 
                                Birch bark peels off in paper strips  
                              
 - trees 
                                in the forest have a narrow, oval shaped crown 
                                above a slender trunk  
                              
 - the 
                                crown is pyramid shaped when the trees are found 
                                in the open  
                              
 - in 
                                dense stands the lower trunk is largely branch 
                                free so can produce large strips of bark  
                              
 - Paper 
                                Birch is winter food for many animals and a nesting 
                                site for a number of birds  
                              
 - Paper 
                                Birch can readily sprout from cut parts  
                            
  
                           
                           LOCATION: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - Paper 
                                Birch is found throughout BC  
                              
 - but, 
                                not on the west coast islands or right on the 
                                coastline  
                              
 - Paper 
                                Birch occurs in uplands, floodplain sites, avalanche 
                                tracks, swamp edges, bogs  
                              
 - Paper 
                                Birch can grow in a variety of soils  
                            
  
                           
                           SIZE: 
                             
                           
                           FRUIT: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - nutlets 
                                with wings broader than the seed body  
                            
  
                           
                           FLOWERS: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - narrow 
                                catkins; female 2 to 4 cm and stand erect at the 
                                branch tip; male are longer and hang below the 
                                branch  
                              
 - appear 
                                at the time of or before the leaves  
                              
 - break 
                                up after maturity  
                            
  
                           
                           LEAVES: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - egg-shaped, 
                                sharp pointed tip  
                              
 - double-toothed 
                                edges  
                              
 - dull 
                                green, smooth to hairy with a paler underside 
                                with a downy texture  
                            
  
                           
                           BARK: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - thin, 
                                white to reddish-brown or copper  
                              
 - smooth, 
                                marked with brown horizontal slits or lines  
                              
 - the 
                                reddish-orange inner bark is exposed when the 
                                bark is peeled off, gradually turning black  
                            
  
                           
                           USES: 
                             
                            
                            
                              - modern 
                                - pulp, sawlogs, veneer logs, paneling, tongue 
                                depressors, cheese boxes, firewood; birch sap: 
                                vinegar or birch beer  
                              
 - traditional 
                                - bark: baskets, cradles, canoes, wrapping and 
                                storing food, roofing pit houses, snow goggles, 
                                moose calls, toboggans; wood: eating utensils 
                                and dishes; sap: medicine for colds
                            
  
                           
                         
                         
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