Your search found 19 image(s) of leaves of Hazel Alder, Hazelnut, Witch Hazel and Witch-alder.
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Habitat: Streambanks, bogs, wet thickets
Leaves straight-veined, petiolate; apex acute or rounded; base widely cuneate, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Habitat: Dry rocky woodlands, thickets, high elevation forests and openings, seepage swamps
Leaves soft-hairy beneath, doubly-serrate, base heart-shaped or rounded, per Forest Plants of the Southeast and Their Wildlife Uses (Miller & Miller, 2005).
Habitat: Rocky woodlands, mesic to rich forests and thickets
Leaves doubly-toothed, heart-shaped at base, and hairy, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Habitat: Moist to dryish forests
Leaves are wavy-toothed and uneven at base, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Base of lateral veins included in leaf tissue (vs. marginal in Fothergilla), per Weakley's Flora (2012).
Habitat: Longleaf pine sandhill margins, xeric hammocks, streamheads
Leaves average 6.4cm long, but range from 3.6 to 10.3cm, per Weakley's Flora (2023).
Habitat: Stream banks, open riparian forests, gravel bars, river scour; also lower slopes adjacent to these habitats
Leaves usually with 9-10 lateral veins, per Weakley's Flora (2023).
Leaves mostly obovate, base cuneate (one side cuneate, rounded or cordate), per Weakley's Flora (2023).
Habitat: Wet savannas, pocosins, and margins of pocosins, and pitcherplant bogs
Leaves up to 6cm long and 5cm wide (the largest < 5.2cm wide), per Weakley's Flora (2015).
Leaves stellate-pubescent above (vs. F. major being sparsely so or glabrous), per Weakley's Flora (2015).
Leaves reminiscent of the closely related small tree, Witch Hazel, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Base of lateral veins marginal (vs. included in leaf tissue in Hamamelis), per Weakley's Flora (2022).
Habitat: Dry ridgetop forests of middle elevation ridges in the mountains, especially along the Blue Ridge Escarpment, summits and upper slopes of Piedmont monadnocks, north-facing bluffs and along small streams in the lower Piedmont
Leaves lobed or coarsely toothed near tip, or entire; base rounded or slightly cordate, per Native Shrubs and Woody Vines of the Southeast (Foote & Jones, 1989).
The lowermost secondary veins forming a V shape in an otherwise larger cordate or rounded base, per Weakley's Flora (2023).