Subdivision Betula species are organised into five subgenera. ; Birches native to
Eurasia include •
Betula albosinensis – Chinese red birch (northern + central China) •
Betula alnoides – alder-leaf birch (China, Himalayas, northern Indochina) •
Betula ashburneri – (Bhutan, Tibet, Sichuan, Yunnan Provinces in China) •
Betula baschkirica – (eastern European Russia) •
Betula bomiensis – (Tibet) •
Betula browicziana – (Turkey and Georgia) •
Betula buggsii – (China) •
Betula calcicola – (Sichuan + Yunnan Provinces in China) •
Betula celtiberica – (Spain and Portugal) •
Betula chichibuensis – (
Chichibu region of Japan) •
Betula chinensis – Chinese dwarf birch (China, Korea) •
Betula coriaceifolia – (Uzbekistan) •
Betula corylifolia – (Honshu Island in Japan) •
Betula costata – (northeastern China, Korea, Primorye region of Russia) •
Betula cylindrostachya – (Himalayas, southern China, Myanmar) •
Betula dahurica – (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan) •
Betula delavayi – (Tibet, southern China) •
Betula ermanii – Erman's birch (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Korea, Japan) •
Betula falcata – (Tajikistan) •
Betula fargesii – (Chongqing + Hubei Provinces in China) •
Betula fruticosa – (eastern Siberia, Russian Far East, northeastern China, Mongolia, Korea, Japan) •
Betula globispica – (Honshu Island in Japan) •
Betula gmelinii – (Siberia, Mongolia, northeastern China, Korea, Hokkaido Island in Japan) •
Betula grossa – Japanese cherry birch (Japan) •
Betula gynoterminalis – (Yunnan Province in China) •
Betula honanensis – (Henan Province in China) •
Betula humilis or
Betula kamtschatica – Kamchatka birch
platyphylla (northern + central Europe, Siberia, Kazakhstan, Xinjiang, Mongolia, Korea) •
Betula insignis – (southern China) •
Betula karagandensis – (Kazakhstan) •
Betula klokovii – (Ukraine) •
Betula kotulae – (Ukraine) •
Betula luminifera – (China) •
Betula maximowicziana – monarch birch (Japan, Kuril Islands) •
Betula medwediewii – Caucasian birch (Turkey, Iran, Caucasus) •
Betula megrelica – (Republic of Georgia) •
Betula microphylla – (Siberia, Mongolia, Xinjiang, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan) •
Betula nana – dwarf birch (northern + central Europe, Russia, Siberia, Greenland, Northwest Territories of Canada)) •
Betula pendula – silver birch (widespread in Europe and northern Asia; Morocco; naturalized in New Zealand and scattered locations in US + Canada) •
Betula platyphylla – (
Betula pendula var.
platyphylla)—Siberian silver birch (Siberia, Russian Far East, Manchuria, Korea, Japan, Alaska, western Canada) •
Betula potamophila – (Tajikistan) •
Betula potaninii – (southern China) •
Betula psammophila – (Kazakhstan) •
Betula pubescens – downy birch, also known as white, European white or hairy birch (Europe, Siberia, Greenland, Newfoundland; naturalized in scattered locations in US) •
Betula raddeana – (Caucasus) •
Betula saksarensis – (Khakassiya region of Siberia) •
Betula saviczii – (Kazakhstan) •
Betula schmidtii – (northeastern China, Korea, Japan, Primorye region of Russia) •
Betula sunanensis – (Gansu Province of China) •
Betula szechuanica – (
Betula pendula var.
szechuanica)—Sichuan birch (Tibet, southern China) •
Betula tianshanica – (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Xinjiang, Mongolia) •
Betula utilis – Himalayan birch (Afghanistan, Central Asia, China, Tibet, Himalayas) •
Betula wuyiensis – (Fujian Province of China) •
Betula zinserlingii – (Kyrgyzstan) Note: many American texts have
B. pendula and
B. pubescens confused, though they are distinct species with different chromosome numbers. ; Birches native to
North America include •
Betula alleghaniensis – yellow birch (
B. lutea) (eastern Canada, Great Lakes, upper eastern US, Appalachians) •
Betula caerulea – blue birch (northeast of North America) •
Betula cordifolia – mountain paper birch (eastern Canada, Great Lakes, New England US) •
Betula glandulosa – American dwarf birch (Siberia, Mongolia, Russian Far East, Alaska, Canada, Greenland, mountains of western US and New England, Adirondacks) •
Betula kenaica – Kenai birch ( Alaska, northwestern North America) •
Betula lenta – sweet birch, cherry birch, or black birch (Quebec, Ontario, eastern US) •
Betula michauxii – Newfoundland dwarf birch (Newfoundland, Labrador, Quebec, Nova Scotia) •
Betula minor – dwarf white birch (eastern Canada, mountains of northern New England and Adirondacks) •
Betula murrayana – Murray's birch (Great Lakes endemic) •
Betula nana – dwarf birch or bog birch (also in northern Europe and Asia) •
Betula neoalaskana – Alaska paper birch also known as Alaska birch or Resin birch (Alaska and northern Canada) •
Betula nigra – river birch or black birch (eastern US) •
Betula occidentalis – water birch or red birch (
B. fontinalis) (Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories, western Canada, western US) •
Betula papyrifera – paper birch, canoe birch or American white birch (Alaska, most of Canada, northern US) •
Betula populifolia – gray birch (eastern Canada, northeastern US) •
Betula pumila – swamp birch (Alaska, Canada, northern US) •
Betula uber – Virginia round-leaf birch (southwestern Virginia)
Etymology The common name
birch comes from
Old English birce,
bierce, from
Proto-Germanic *
berk-jōn (cf.
German Birke,
West Frisian bjirk), an adjectival formation from *
berkōn (cf.
Dutch berk,
Low German Bark,
Danish birk,
Norwegian bjørk), itself from the
Proto-Indo-European root *
bʰerHǵ- ~
bʰrHǵ-, which also gave
Lithuanian béržas,
Latvian Bērzs,
Russian берёза (berëza),
Ukrainian береза (
beréza),
Albanian bredh 'fir',
Ossetian bærz(æ),
Sanskrit bhurja,
Polish brzoza,
Latin fraxinus 'ash (tree)'. This root is presumably derived from *
bʰreh₁ǵ- 'to shine, whiten', in reference to the birch's white bark. The
Proto-Germanic rune berkanan is named after the birch. The generic name
Betula is from
Latin, which is a
diminutive borrowed from
Gaulish betua (cf.
Old Irish bethe,
Welsh bedw). ==Evolutionary history==