Intro:
Stems: Pith continuous or diaphragmed. Young twigs (1-year-old or less) brown or green or orange or reddish-brown, glabrous or glabrate or pubescent. Twigs (2-4 years old) glabrous. Leaf scars crescent-shaped or half-round or heart-shaped or triangular, bundle scars 3 per leaf scar, stipule scars absent. Bark of mature trunks checkered or furrowed or ridged. Buds axillary or superposed or terminal, brown or red or reddish-brown, 3-6 mm long, ovoid, blunt or sharp, pubescent, bud scales imbricate.
Leaves: Leaves deciduous, simple, petiolate, alternate, (2.5-)5-15 cm long, (1.3-)2.5-10 cm wide, oblanceloate or obovate or oval or ovate, leaf margins entire or dentate, leaf apices acuminate or acute or obtuse, leaf bases cuneate or rounded. Leaf upper surface green, glabrous or glabrate. Leaf lower surface green, glabrous or glabrate or pubescent or with tufts in vein axils, villous. Leaf venation pinnate. Petioles (0.6-)1-2.5(-3.8) cm long, glabrous or pubescent, winged. Stipules absent.
Inforescence: Inflorescences axillary, fascicles or heads or racemes or flowers solitary or simple umbels, flowers sessile or stalked.
Flowers: Flowers bisexual or unisexual or pistillate or staminate, epigynous. Perianth. Sepals 5 per flower. Petals 5 per flower, spreading or ascending, green or white, oblong or ovate, petal apices acute or rounded, caducous. Androecium. Stamens 5-12 per flower. Gynoecium. Ovaries inferior, pistils 1 per flower. Gynoecium syncarpous, 2 carpels per flower, styles 1 per pistil, styles 1.5-3.5 mm long, placentation apical. Hypanthia present.
Fruits: Fruits drupes, (0.7-)1-1.5 cm long, black or blue, fruit maturation 1 years.
Comments: Leaves often crowded at the ends of branchlets; branches perpendicular to the trunk.
Height: 60 plus feet
plant sale text: Black-gum is one of our most adaptable SE trees, growing on dry slopes and low, moist forests. Though its leaves are somewhat nondescript, its has a curious way of branching that makes it easily identifiable in the field; nearly all of its branches are borne at exactly 90 degree angles from the trunk of the tree. The best thing about Black-gum is its fall color. Its leaves turn dark red before any other species have started changing. Its fruits are an important source of food to birds migrating in the fall.
bloom table text:
description:
stems: Pith continuous or diaphragmed. Young twigs (1-year-old or less) brown or green or orange or reddish-brown, glabrous or glabrate or pubescent. Twigs (2-4 years old) glabrous. Leaf scars crescent-shaped or half-round or heart-shaped or triangular, bundle scars 3 per leaf scar, stipule scars absent. Bark of mature trunks checkered or furrowed or ridged. Buds axillary or superposed or terminal, brown or red or reddish-brown, 3-6 mm long, ovoid, blunt or sharp, pubescent, bud scales imbricate.
leaves: Leaves deciduous, simple, petiolate, alternate, (2.5-)5-15 cm long, (1.3-)2.5-10 cm wide, oblanceloate or obovate or oval or ovate, leaf margins entire or dentate, leaf apices acuminate or acute or obtuse, leaf bases cuneate or rounded. Leaf upper surface green, glabrous or glabrate. Leaf lower surface green, glabrous or glabrate or pubescent or with tufts in vein axils, villous. Leaf venation pinnate. Petioles (0.6-)1-2.5(-3.8) cm long, glabrous or pubescent, winged. Stipules absent.
inflorescence: Inflorescences axillary, fascicles or heads or racemes or flowers solitary or simple umbels, flowers sessile or stalked.
flowers: Flowers bisexual or unisexual or pistillate or staminate, epigynous. Perianth. Sepals 5 per flower. Petals 5 per flower, spreading or ascending, green or white, oblong or ovate, petal apices acute or rounded, caducous. Androecium. Stamens 5-12 per flower. Gynoecium. Ovaries inferior, pistils 1 per flower. Gynoecium syncarpous, 2 carpels per flower, styles 1 per pistil, styles 1.5-3.5 mm long, placentation apical. Hypanthia present.
fruits: Fruits drupes, (0.7-)1-1.5 cm long, black or blue, fruit maturation 1 years.
comments: Leaves often crowded at the ends of branchlets; branches perpendicular to the trunk.
cultural notes:
germination code:
native range: eastern United States