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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Celtis occidentalis | Hackberry
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Celtis occidentalis | Hackberry
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Hackberry is a native, deciduous small to large tree, its size varying in response to habitat [16]. In poor, dry sites, growth is so stunted that the plant appears as a shrub. This drought and flood tolerant tree grows up to 82 feet (25m) high with the larger branches 26 to 33 feet (8-10m) above the ground [37], although on the Great Plains and on dryer sites it usually grows to only 25 to 50 feet (7.5-15m) high with a diameter of 8-24 inches (20-61cm) [21]. On the best sites hackberry may reach 130 feet (40m) with a diameter of 4 feet (1.25m) [21]. The rather thick (1 to 1 1/2 inches (2.5-4cm)), dark brown to grey bark is deeply furrowed, checkered and warty when older; the younger branches are mostly pubescent [16,31]. Hackberry has lateral roots which tend to be medium deep to shallow [31,41]. Early growth of hackberry varies greatly within its range. Height growth may not exceed 1 inch (2.5cm)/year under a heavy overstory, but when planted in Great Plains shelterbelts, plants average 1.3 feet (40cm)/year during the first 6 years [34]. Maximum age attained by hackberry is between 150 and 200 years [21]. The simple, alternate leaves are lance-ovate or deltoid from 2 to 4.5 inches (5-12cm) long and 1.2 to 2.4 inches (3-6cm) wide with a serrate margin. The lower surface of the leaves is paler and pubescent [16,37]. This monoecious tree has perfect, unisexual flowers which appear in the spring as the new leaves emerge [17]. The inconspicuous, small, green flowers are wind-pollinated [34]. Staminate flowers appear singly or in clusters of two to three at the base of a short, green branch. Pistillate flowers appear singly or in pairs [37]. Hackberry fruit is a round drupe with a thin, sweet, edible pulp enclosing a bony, cream-colored nutlet. The fruit, which is usually variable in size, form and color [21] is dark orange or red to dark purple or black in color, and is about 1/4 to 1/3 inch (0.5-1cm) in diameter on a 2/3 inch (15mm) pedicel [7,16,17,37]. Hackberry produces good seed crops each year [43]. Hackberry is host to a large number of insects and diseases, most of which cause no serious damage. Four gall-producing insects attack this tree, and the entire crown may be defoliated by the spiny elm caterpillar or the hackberry butterfly caterpillar. The hackberry engraver beetle attacks mostly dead or dying branches, but has been reported to attack living sapwood as well, causing the tree to die. A witches'-broom caused by the mite Eriophyes spp. and a powdery mildew fungus causes a rosette-like proliferation of the branch tips, but does not cause serious damage to the tree [21,41]. Many ecotypes of this variable species are known to occur. Varieties are distinguished by such morphological charcteristics as growth form, height, leaf size and margin, and fruit shape and color. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Undisturbed State: Mesophanerophyte Undisturbed State: Microphanerophyte Burned or Clipped State: Therophyte (offsite) Burned or Clipped State: Chamaephyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Hackberry regenerates primarily through sexual reproduction. This tree produces good seed crops most years, with at least some seed produced each year [7,21]. Although some seed may be dispersed by water, most is disseminated principally by birds and small mammals. The fruit, a drupe with sweet, edible pulp [37], is consumed by many species of birds and mammals, which then disperse the seeds in their feces [34]. Some fruit stays on the tree through the winter, but most is consumed or falls off before spring [34,43]. This shade tolerant species is a member of several late seral and climax communities, reproducing even in heavy shade [11,21,35]. Hackberry seedlings become established in existing hardwood stands, but rarely in old fields, and seedlings and saplings have been observed growing in heavy shade where seedlings of other overstory species did not persist [21]. Height growth may only be 1 inch (0.5cm)/year under heavy overstory [21]. Krajicek [21] reports that when cut, hackberry will produce sprouts from the stumps of small trees, but rarely from those of larger trees, However, there is little other evidence in the literature of this species' ability to sprout. On the Konza prairie in Kansas, hackberry is replacing the more heliophilous (sun-loving) bur and chinkapin oaks (Quercus macrocarpa and Q. muehlenbergii), only where fire has been excluded, as fire kills the seedlings and saplings [34]. This suggests that hackberry is unable to sprout after fire or to reproduce in the openings it creates. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Hackberry is adapted to a variety of climatic conditions. Average annual precipitation varies from 14 to 60 inches (35.5-155cm), and the average frost-free season is from 120 to 250 days. Hackberry tolerates an annual temperature variation of 140F (60C) in the Great Plains [21]. However, the northern extension of its range is limited by late spring frosts which destroy flowers, or by early autumn frosts which kill the germs of immature fruits. It grows best on moist valley soils along streambanks and on flood plains [16] but is also commonly found on slopes and bluffs, on limestone outcrops, on the north side of sand dunes in western Nebraska, on upland sites in the central Great Plains under existing oak stands on all aspects, slopes and ridges, on rocky hillsides in open woodlands [21], and along the base of canyon walls of the Arikaree River in Colorado [4]. In the northern Great Plains portion of its range, where rainfall is insufficient to support upland tree growth, hackberry is restricted to well developed river valleys, north slopes and protected ravines, and is absent from the windswept parts of the western river valleys [21]. Although principally a bottomland tree, sites with a permanently high water table are unfavorable for hackberry; however, periodic flooding is not detrimental. In Kentucky, 46 days of flooding during one growing season caused no apparent damage to this tree [21]. This species has been planted frequently in the west because of its relative drought tolerance/avoidance [31], but mesic hackberry is less successful at coping with water stress than bur and chinkapin oaks (Quercus macrocarpa and Q. muehlenbergii) [2]. Hackberry is tolerant of a variety of soils, but grows best on moist, rich soils [21]. Its growth is stunted and scraggly on poor, dry sites [31]. This species seems to prefer limestone soils [21]. Hackberry seldom occurs in pure stands, although it is prominent in the northern phase of the sugarberry (Celtis laevigata) - American elm (Ulmus americana) - green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica) forest cover type. It also occurs in several upland forest types in association with sugar maple (Acer rubrum), basswood (Tilia spp.), post oak (Quercus stellata), black oak (Q. velutina), bur oak (Q. macrocarpa), and eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana) [11,21]. In the central Great Plains, hackberry is reproducing under chinkapin oak and bur oak stands, and is replacing the oak woodlands as the major overstory dominant [34]. The elevational ranges for hackberry in several northern Great Plains states are as follows [10]: Colorado 3,500-7,200 feet (1,067-2,195m) Montana 4,000-4,500 feet (1,219-1,372m) Nebraska 2,600-4,500 feet (792-1,372m) South Dakota 3,000-3,500 feet (914-1,067m) Utah 4,800 feet (1,463m) Wyoming 4,800 feet (1,463m). SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Hackberry is found in many forest types ranging from early to late seral, making its successional position difficult to determine. This tree is intermediate to tolerant in its ability to withstand shade and seems to require shade for reproduction of its seedlings [21]. In the Konza prairie of the central Great Plains where fires are excluded, succession is progressing from oak dominated woodlands to forests dominated by hackberry. Abrams [1] states that on the more mesic sites of the Konza prairie, hackberry may be the future sole dominant of what are now oak woodlands. Hackberry also establishes itself on river floodplains of the central Great Plains under willow (Salix spp.) and eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides), and is probably the climax species [5]. This species is also a member of several late-seral communities [11,35]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Hackberry, a polygamo-monoecious tree, flowers when the leaves emerge, or shortly after, in early April in the southern part of its range, and in late May in the northern part. The fruit, a drupe, ripens from September to October, and remains on the tree throughout the winter [7,21]. This deciduous tree drops its leaves in the fall, generally after the first frost.

Related categories for Species: Celtis occidentalis | Hackberry

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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