
MICHIGAN FORESTS FOREVER TEACHERS GUIDE
| TREE IDENTIFICATION CHARACTERISTICS OR . . . WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO LOOK AT?! |
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Trees are cool.
Learning how to ID trees and learning about their "personalities" is like making
new friends. Theres a lot more to know about trees than just how to tell them
apart! The more time you spend with trees and in the forest, the more you will
understand about some of the neatest places on Earth. But we have to begin somewhere
and ID is a great first step.
There are certain
parts of a tree that will tell you what species youre looking at. Usually, we think
only of leaves. But, of course, this doesnt help us
much in winter if the leaves have fallen (not all do!). Leaves on tall trees that
are only way up in the air dont help us much either.
So, we should learn to look at other parts, such as twigs, buds, bud scars, bark, flowers, fruits, branching pattern, tree form, where the tree is growing, and "who" the tree is growing with. Its not necessary to learn every characteristic of every species (although its fun). Generally, just one or two features will be enough but you have to know which ones are important for which tree! Thats the hard part. For example, most of us can identify paper birch from just the bark. But how many of us can tell the difference between maples, elms, oaks, and ashes without the leaves? (How many of us can do that even with the leaves!) And, what about all the conifers? Some of the following considerations will help you look in the correct place in a tree ID book or this on-line tree ID key.
Getting good at identifying trees takes practice. Once you know your trees, it becomes much easier to learn about shrubs, flowers, and wildlife that grow together with the trees. Trees dominate forest ecosystems, so if you have a pretty good idea of what trees are there, youll have a pretty good idea of whats happening in that environment and what else might be living with those trees.
Its a good thing to know
about trees and forests because we need them for many reasons. So, have fun learning
to identify trees and discovering how they grow! The forest is a great place to
live and work.
Tree ID Pages: Michigan Tree Species, ID Keys, ID Websites, ID Glossary
| Activity Suggestions PLT How Plants Grow |
|
MCF Benchmarks |
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This website was developed and created by Michigan State University Extension for the teachers of the State of Michigan. The website is maintained by the Delta-Schoolcraft Independent School District in support of the Michigan Forests Forever CD-ROM from the Michigan Forest Resource Alliance. |
Page Name:
TreeBasics/TreeIDchars.htm
Please provide comments to Bill Cook: cookwi@msu.edu
or 786-1575
.