is an alder tree native to western North America, from British Columbia and Washington east to western Montana, southeast to the Sierra Nevada, and south through the Peninsular Ranges and Colorado Desert oases in Southern California.[2] It occurs in riparian zone habitats at an altitudes range of 100β2,400 metres (330β7,870 ft).[3][4] While not reported in northern Baja California, it has been predicted on the basis of its climatic adaptation to occur there also.[3] Alnus rhombifolia is primarily found in the chaparral and woodlands, montane, and temperate forests ecoregionsSome Plateau Indian tribes used white alder for female health treatment needs
Alnus rhombifolia is a medium-sized deciduous tree growing to 15β25 metres (49β82 ft) (rarely to 35 metres (115 ft)) tall, with pale gray bark, smooth on young trees, becoming scaly on old trees. The leaves are alternate, rhombic to narrow elliptic, 4β10 centimetres (1.6β3.9 in) long and 2β5 centimetres (0.79β1.97 in) broad, with a finely serrated margin and a rounded to acute apex; they are thinly hairy below.[
The flowers are produced in catkins. The male catkins are pendulous, slender, 3β10 centimetres (1.2β3.9 in) long, yellowish, and produced in clusters of two to seven; pollination is in early spring, before the leaves emerge. The female catkins are ovoid, when mature in autumn 10β22 millimetres (0.39β0.87 in) long and 7β10 millimetres (0.28β0.39 in) broad, on a 1β10 millimetres (0.039β0.394 in) stem, superficially resembling a small conifer cone.[5] The small winged seeds disperse through the winter, leaving the old woody, blackish 'cones' on the tree for up to a year after.
The white alder is closely related to the red alder (Alnus rubra), differing in the leaf margins being flat, not curled under. Like other alders, it is able to fix nitrogen, and tolerates infertile soils. Invasive in western North America.