|
|
Home
hackberry
Listing 1 - 10 from 78 for hackberry
The Hackberry
... unequal-sided, sharply
toothed.
Bark: smooth with corky warts.
Fruit: a
drupe.
ash |
beech
|
basswood |
birch |
black cherry |
black walnut/butternut
|
cottonwood |
elm |
hackberry |
hickory |
holly |
locust |
magnolia |
maple |
oak |
poplar |
red alder |
royal paulownia |
sassafras |
sweetgum |
sycamore |
tupelo |
willow |
yellow-poplar
ID Glossary
...
forestry.about.com
Hackberry
Hackberry Leaf Characteristics broad, flat simple not lobed fine, double teeth all teeth same size shorter stem side veins near base same length assymmetric, narrow Fruit Characteristics other fruit (not cone, winged ... leaf not like rasperries fruit not at end of single stalk fruit borne singly dark red Hackberry Celtis occidentalis The bark of younger trees is gray to brown and smooth. Later, it is ...
www.oplin.org
Celtis laevigata var. reticulata, netleaf hackberry
Celtis laevigata var. reticulata, netleaf hackberry Celtis laevigata Willd. var. reticulata (Torr.) L. Benson Family: Ulmaceae (elms & hackberries) Common names: netleaf hackberry, roughleaf hackberry, western hackberry Synonyms: Celtis reticulata, Celtis douglasii, Celtis occidentalis var. reticulata Small tree or large shrub to 10 m (30 ft) tall and 25 cm (10 in) in diameter. Bark gray, smooth ...
www.biosurvey.ou.edu
Celtis occidentalis, northern hackberry
Celtis occidentalis, northern hackberry Celtis occidentalis L. Family: Ulmaceae (elms and hackberries) Common name: northern hackberry, common hackberry Synonym: For now, we are including the taxon known as C. pumila or C. occidentalis var. pumila with this one. In the Oklahoma specimens it is very difficult to make a distinction between the two. Tree to 18 m (60 ft) tall and 60 cm (2 ft) in ...
www.biosurvey.ou.edu
More from this site
VT Forestry I.D. Cards - hackberry
VT Forestry I.D. Cards - hackberry hackberry Ulmaceae Celtis occidentalis Leaf:Alternate, simple, ovate, 2 to 5 inches long, serrated margin, pinnately veined, with acuminate tip and an inequilateral base, three distinct veins originate from base, maybe hairy or scruffy, green above and paler and somewhat pubescent below. Flower:Monoecious; very small (1/8 inch), light green, produced on stalks ...
www.cnr.vt.edu
Questions On Hackberry
... Canada) A: I have been asked about apples, cherries, apricots, and plums fruiting but never hackberry fruiting in 16 years of answering horticulture questions. It will bear fruit, most likely, when ... futile, unless their physical presence can be ascertained. Thanks for the good sample. Q: These hackberry and linden leaves are from trees planted last year. They were translucent, yellow and puckered ...
www.ext.nodak.edu
Untitled Document
... Dogwood Forsythia Frasier Fir G return to the top of the page Giant Redwood Ginkgo Glossy Buckthorn Green Ash Greenbriar Grey Dogwood H return to the top of the page Hackberry Hawthorne Hazelnut Hemlock Hickory Highbush Cranberry Holly Honeysuckle Honeylocust Hophornbeam Hornbeam Horsechestnut Hydrangia I Ironwood (Ostrya) Ironwood (Carpinus) J return to the top of the page Japanese Barberry ...
botit.botany.wisc.edu
Can I attract butterflies without gardening? - Butterfly Garden
... in order to produce the chemicals for mating purposes. (tdogmom) (quoting the Audubon Society Field Guide) "Hackberry butterflies share a strong fondness for the juices of rotting fruit, and can be lured out ... them up a little, poke a few holes, and pour in a little watermelon Gatorade. They hackberry's love it. I have a lot of that same butterfly. (Konkreteblond) Entered by Larry_Gene Butterfly ...
faq.gardenweb.com
Identify a Tree | Tree Anatomy Physiology | Type of Tree
... Cherry The Willow/CottonwoodDescription of cottonwood - Salix The WalnutDescription by Individual Walnut Species The ElmsDescription of Individual Elm Species - Ulmus The HackberryDescription of Hackberry - Celtis The HickoryDescription by Individual Hickory Species - Carya American HollyDescription of American Holly - Ilex opaca Black LocustDescription of Black Locust - Robinia pseudoacacia The ...
forestry.about.com
Open Directory - Science:Biology:Flora and Fauna:Plantae:Magnoliophyta:Magnoliopsida
... many which are partial root parasites and a few that are without chlorophyll and are wholly parasitic. Ulmaceae The elm family. Included in the Hamamelidae. Woody plants, including elm and hackberry. Found primarily in Europe and North America. Viscaceae The mistletoe family. Open Directory Science: Biology: Genetics: Eukaryotic: Plant: Dicots Copyright 1998-2006 Netscape Last update: 22:18 PT, ...
dmoz.org
These listings are filtered View all for hackberry
|