Black Cherry

Black Cherry     (Wild Cherry, Rum Cherry)     Prunus serotina Ehrh.

Mature Size: 60 to 100 feet in height, 1 to 4 feet in diameter

Form: Long, clear trunk and oblong crown.  

Where to Find Them: Grows on many sites that are not very wet or very dry; reaches best growth in mountains

Leaves: Alternate, simple, 2 to 5 inches long, oblong to lance-shaped, finely toothed, dark green and shiny above, paler below, usually with yellowish-brown fuzz along mid-rib.

Fruit: Round, 1⁄3 inch in diameter, dark purple to almost black when ripe; maturing in summer.

Wildlife Uses: The bitter, fleashy fruits is an important food source for many songbirds and are a favorite of the robin, brown thrasher, cedar waxwing and pileated woodpecker.

Bark: Bark on young trees, thin, satiny, reddish-brown, with horizontal markings made up of patches or rows of pores; on older trees, dark brown to black, covered with small, scaly plates with slightly upraised edges, resembling burnt potato chips.

Use the  “RETURN” button to return to the tree list

OR

Scan the QR code on the next tree sign

Upcoming Events

March 10th  Marine Career Day at Cat Point Creek
March 19th  JCIS Sixth Grade Field Day
April 18th  SWCD Tappahannock Earth Day in Tappahannock
May 16th Native Plant Exchange/Sale Cat Point Creek
May 26th Northumberland-Lancaster Spring Butterfly Count

Rappahannock Wildlife Refuge Friends

P.O. Box 1565
Warsaw, VA  22572-1565
Contact@RWRFriends.org

Upcoming Events on the Refuge