• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
TCV logo

How To Grow Trees

  • Search
  • Jobs
  • Media Hub
  • Contact
  • Donate
MENUMENU
  • Grow trees
        • Collecting tree seed
        • Extracting tree seed
        • Pretreatment
        • Sowing your tree seeds
        • Growing
        • Transplanting
        • Planting
        • All tree recipes
        • Alder
        • Ash
        • Aspen
        • Downy birch
        • Bird cherry
        • Blackthorn
        • Crab apple
        • Dog Rose
        • Elder
        • Goat willow
        • Gorse
        • Guelder rose
        • Grey willow
        • Hawthorn
        • Hazel
        • Holly
        • Juniper
        • Pedunculate oak
        • Sessile oak
        • Rowan
        • Scots pine
        • Silver birch
        • Spindle
        • Wild cherry
        • Wych elm
  • Identify trees
        • Alder
        • Aspen
        • Ash
        • Bird cherry
        • Blackthorn
        • Crab apple
        • Dog rose
        • Downy birch
        • Elder
        • Goat willow
        • Gorse
        • Guelder rose
        • Grey willow
        • Hawthorn
        • Hazel
        • Holly
        • Juniper
        • Rowan
        • Pedunculate oak
        • Sessile oak
        • Scots pine
        • Silver birch
        • Spindle
        • Wild cherry
        • Wych elm
  • Free trees
  • Support us

How to identify Alder

Scientific Name: Alnus glutinosa

Family: Birch

Scientific Family: Betulaceae

How to grow Alder

Alder grows on wet and clay soil, which is usually poor in minerals. The tree has a special way of obtaining nutrients. It fixes nitrogen (essential for growth) by growing in symbiosis with bacteria that absorb nitrogen from the air. These organisms live in nodules on the roots and the tree benefits greatly from their presence.

Nodules on the roots of a young alder tree
Nodules on the roots of a young alder tree

Leaves

The young leaves are sticky to the touch and particularly ‘elastic’. They can vary in colour from almost violet through to red and vibrant green. They are very shiny.

Older leaves are rounded and exhibit a ‘notched’ rather than a pointed tip. In the autumn, the leaves tend to turn brown and dry before falling.

Leaves of an alder tree
Leaves of an alder tree

Flowers

The flowers appear before the leaves in early spring. Female and male flowers are borne on the same tree. Female and male flowers are borne on the same tree.

The male flower is a long catkin (about 5-10cm) and turns yellow as it sheds its pollen. The female flower is a very small catkin, purple in colour (at the top of the picture) and will eventually turn into the cone that contains the seeds.

Alder flowers
Alder flowers – the male catkins are long and yellow

Fruits

The fruits are ripe in October and take the form of small cones. They turn from green to brown as they dry and open to disperse the seed.

The seeds, or nutlets, are flat and waxy and have two corky wings containing air bubbles, which allows them to float and to be carried away by water. The cones often remain on the tree during the wintertime, long after the seeds are gone.

Alder cones
Ripening alder cones – they will dry and open to disperse the seeds

Bark

The bark is greyish and rough. As the tree grows and the trunk expands, fissures or cracks appear in it. Despite this, the timber is very water-resistant. In fact, part of the foundations of Venice is built from this timber.

Bark of a young alder

Habitat

Alder grows along rivers and on wetlands. In fact, it thrives anywhere where the ground is damp.

The roots of the alder often help to stabilise the riverbank and prevent the soil from being washed away. This ensures that riverbanks and lakesides provide many different habitats and, therefore, support a wide diversity of other life. They provide a home for otters and kingfishers, for example.

More about conservation

Learn the art of dry stone walling, woodland management, tree planting, hedgelaying and much more. Advice, instructions and support to manage your countryside and green spaces

The definitive ‘how to’ conservation guides

  • Keep in touch
    • Find TCV
    • Contact us
    • Blogs
    • Newsletter
  • Join in, feel good
    • Volunteer with TCV
    • Green Gym
    • Careers
    • Partner with TCV
  • Information
    • About this site
    • About TCV
    • Safeguarding
    • Privacy policy
    • Terms and conditions
  • Resources
    • Conservation Handbooks
    • Grow your own trees (this site)

© Copyright 2025 The Conservation Volunteers and Andy Smith

Registered in England as a limited company (976410) and as a charity in England (261009) and Scotland (SCO39302)
Registered Office: Gresley House, Ten Pound Walk, Doncaster DN4 5HX

Fundraising Regulator logo

Website by Made in Trenbania