Sycamore
Sycamore (Buttonwood, American Planetree)
Platanus occidentalis L.
Mature Size: 80 to 100 feet but may reach 150 feet in height, 3 to 4 feet in diameter but may reach 10 feet in diameter
Form: Straight, often massive trunk, with spreading, crooked branches forming an open crown
Where to Find Them: Stream banks and rich bottomlands.
Leaves: Alternate, simple, 5 to 8 inches long and wide, large-toothed edges, 3 to 5 major lobes divided by broad, shallow sinuses; several main leaf veins branching from a single point at the leaf base; leaf stem base enlarged, encircling the bud; toothed leaf-like growths encircling stem at base of each leaf.
Fruit and Seeds: A ball tightly packed with winged, 1⁄2-inch seeds, surrounded by fine hairs; maturing in late fall; dispersing in the wind in late winter.
Wildlife use: Only a few wildlife species eat the fluffy seeds, the exceptions being purple finch and goldfinch.Large, old, hollow trees serve as roosting and den sites for wildlife.
Bark: Distinctive “camouflage” mottling of brown, green, tan and white; peeling readily; older stems are grayish-brown and scaly.
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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