Gainesville Landscaping Plant of the Month: River Birch Tree

Pick this rugged native tree for its intriguing peeling bark, soil adaptability or leaves that bring dappled shade to your landscape in Gainesville, FL

River Birch (Betula nigra) is a one of the best trees for year-round interest for your Gainesville, Florida home. With its multicolored papery bark that peels away from the trunk, this North American native species is a great choice for a driveway entrance, backyard habitat or woodland landscape. And its ability to thrive in moist conditions makes it especially valuable where drainage is a concern, like in our current situation with all of the rain we've recieved over the past year. 

 

Botanical name: Betula nigra
Common names: River birch, black birch, water birch
Origin: Native to the eastern United States
USDA zones: 3 to 9 (Gainesville, FL Landscaping is located in zone #8)
Water requirement: Moderate to wet soil; adapts to stream banks (as its common name implies) and poor soils
Light requirement: Full sun to partial shade
Mature size: 40 to 70 feet tall
Benefits and tolerances: Fast-growing, disease-resistant choice for riparian buffers to curb stream erosion and improve biodiversity; leaves are a larval food source for swallowtail butterflies and other insects; seeds attract numerous birds and other wildlife
Seasonal interest: Year-round; beautiful yellow fall color
When to plant: Early spring to late fall

Distinguishing traits. With lustrous 3-inch leaves, slender catkins and textured bark, river birch creates dappled shade that's easy to plant under. 

Its leaf color in fall is a medium yellow. During the winter the bark is a welcome sight; it looks especially good attractive with coarse and soft textured landscape plants..

 

 

Disease-resistant 'Heritage' is a patented selection named by Earl Cully of Heritage Trees; it's an outstanding cultivar that's less prone to leaf spot than other birches and is resistant to the bronze birch borer. It's also smaller than the typical species — reaching about 40 feet tall when mature — and has a deeper saturation of bark hues.

 

 

How to use It. Grow it as a specimen or in a grove to create a naturalistic buffer in full sun; becuase it can offer shade in the summer and allows sun through in winter after it's leaved drop.

Fast growing, multistemmed trees in clump form add visual punch and are good for screening, while single-trunk specimens offer architectural formality.

Planting notes. Trees prefer acidic soils with a pH of 6.5 or lower, so amend when necessary. These are big trees, so allow plenty of room to grow and water during dry spells, especially in warmer zones.

 

 

River Birch make a great addition to any Gainesville lawn.  If you are considering renovating your current landscape or installing a new landscape to your home, please give us a call at 352.378.5296 to schedule an Initial Consultation.  We proudly serve all of Gainesville, Alachua, Jonesville, Haile Plantation, Town of Tioga, and Duck Pond in the Alachua County are of Florida.