The tree can be up to 15 meters in height and usually has several trunks.[7] The bark of the mature trees is usually dark red-reddish brown and has horizontally-expanded lenticels. Its leaves are 5–11 centimeters × 3–6 centimeters.[7]
Taxonomy
It was named by Burton V. Barnes and Bruce P. Dancik, in Canadian Journal of Botany 63(2):223-226, in 1985.[8] The specific epithet honors Frank Murray, the person who discovered the Michigan population of the species.[8]Betula murrayana is an evolutionarily recent species that arose through hybridization between Betula alleghaniensis and another hybrid, Betula × purpusii (a hybrid of B. alleghaniensis and Betula pumila).[8]Betula murryana has a chromosome number of 2n=112, while B. alleghaniensis has 2n=84, B. pumila has 2n=56. and B. × purpusii has 2n=70.[9]
Conservation
Only two sites are known.[9][10] The Ontario population has not been re-located, despite searches, and its status is unclear.[10] The Michigan population has only one surviving non-cultivated individual.[3] However future populations may be discovered along the Great Lakes or St. Lawrence Valley, as there are many areas where the parent species overlap, and the species is a natural hybrid.[8]
^ abAshburner, Kenneth; McAllister, Hugh (2013). The genus Betula: A taxonomic review of birches. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. pp. 206–209. ISBN978-1842461419.
^ abOldham, Michael (2015). "Murray's Birch (Betula murrayana B.V. Barnes & Dancik) in Ontario, Canada". Field Botanists of Ontario. 27 (3): 10–12.