Hackberry

Hackberry    (Sugarberry, Nettletree)    Celtis occidentalis L.

Mature Size: Commonly 40 to 60 feet in height but may reach 140 feet in height, 1 to 2 feet in diameter

Form: Rounded, spreading crown; may have numerous bushy growths on branches (“witches’ brooms”).  Bark is gray and generally smooth, with characteristic corky warts and ridges.

Where to Find Them: Mainly bottomlands and stream sides.

Leaves: Alternate, simple, 2 to 5 inches long, oval with curved, pointed tip and uneven base; three major veins originating at leaf base; small rounded or pointed bumps (galls) caused by an insect are often present on the leaves.

Fruit and Seeds: Round, thin-fleshed, dry but edible fruit, 1⁄4 to 3⁄8 inch across, turning orange-red to dark purple in fall when ripe; often remaining on the tree over winter

Wildlife use:  The sweet fruits (drupes) are eaten by many birds, including bobwhite, robin, wild turkey, and winter visitors to the Refuge like cedar waxwing and yellow-bellied sapsucker.

Bark:  Gray and generally smooth, with characteristic corky warts and ridges

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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

Upcoming Events on the Refuge