
Celtis occidentalis - Wikipedia
It produces small fruits that turn orange-red to dark purple in the autumn, often staying on the trees for several months. The common hackberry is easily confused with the sugarberry (Celtis …
Common Hackberry - Missouri Department of Conservation
Common hackberry is named for its sweet, purple, edible fruits, but most people identify hackberry with its weird-looking bark, which develops numerous corky, wartlike projections …
Hackberry | Silvics of North America
Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), is a widespread small to medium-size tree, known also as common hackberry, sugarberry, nettletree, beaverwood, north ern hackberry, and American …
Hackberry | Celtis occidentalis | The Morton Arboretum
Hackberry is a Chicago-area native and a sturdy, tolerant shade tree for parkways, parks, and other large areas. Its fleshy, purple-brown berries ripen in late summer and persist through …
Learn About Hackberry - Arbor Day Foundation
The fruit of the hackberry is popular with winter birds, especially the cedar waxwing, mockingbird and robin. The tree also attracts many butterfly species including American snout, hackberry, …
Celtis occidentalis - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Celtis occidentalis, commonly called common hackberry, is a medium to large sized deciduous tree that typically grows 40-60’ (less frequently to 100’) tall with upright-arching branching and …
Native Hackberry Trees - A Beginner's Guide - The Plant Native
Hackberries are fast-growing trees that can reach up to 75 feet or more and live for 200 years. They are also the host plants for many butterflies. Hackberries are drama-free thanks to their …
Hackberry Trees (Celtis): Common Types, Leaves, Bark, Fruit …
Jan 3, 2024 · Hackberry (Celtis) is a group of medium-sized, deciduous trees with long ovately-shaped leaves, clusters of small fuzzy spring flowers, and small purple fruits.
Celtis occidentalis (American Hackberry, Beaverwood, Common Hackberry …
Hackberry is a deciduous native tree in the hemp family (Cannabaceae) found from Canada south to FL and west to south-central states often found in bottomlands in soils high in limestone.
Common hackberry | UMN Extension
The bark of hackberry provides year-round interest in landscapes. The fruit is a popular food for birds and small mammalian wildlife. Much of the fruit remains on the tree throughout winter …