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

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Platanus occidentalis | Sycamore
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Sycamore is a native, deciduous tree. Although not the tallest, it is amoung the tallest trees of eastern deciduous forests [78]. Mature heights range from 60 to 120 feet (18-37 m) [9,83]. Reported diameters range from 2 to 6.6 feet (0.6-2 m) [83]. The bark of young trunks has small scales. Bark at the base of large trunks is deeply furrowed and up to 3 inches thick (7.6 cm) [83]; on the upper portions of the trunk the bark exfoliates in patches, leaving areas of inner bark exposed [30,78]. The leaves are 4 to 10 inches (10-25.4 cm) long, often as broad or broader than they are long [83]. Sycamores form widespread, strongly branched root systems [78]. The fruit is a plumed achene [52]; numerous fruits are tightly aggregated into a ball-shaped fruiting head 0.8 to 2 inches (2-5 cm) in diameter [9,13]. Sycamore is characterized by rapid growth throughout its life; it is also long lived (over 250 years) [78]. A sycamore measuring 140 feet (43 m) tall and 120 inches (305 cm) dbh has been reported; a specimen from Indiana was reported as 168 feet (51 m) tall and 33 feet (10 m) in circumference. Open-grown individuals can achieve a crown spread of 100 feet (30 m) or more [78]. A survey of big trees in seven mid-southern states reported that the second and fourth largest trees (of all species) were sycamores. The largest sycamore in these states was a Tennessee tree 140 feet tall (42.67 m) and 65.9 inches (167.4 cm) dbh, with a circumference of 207 inches (525.8 cm), the largest circumference of any tree in these states [53]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Sycamore is monoecious. Plantation-grown sycamores are usually sexually mature in 6 to 7 years. Natural stands of sycamore usually produce appreciable numbers of seed at approximately 25 years; optimum seed production occurs from 50 to 200 years of age. Seed production is not dependable from trees over 250 years old. Good seed crops are produced every 1 to 2 years [78]. Sycamore seeds are dispersed by wind and water [83]. They have a relatively rapid rate of descent for light seeds; the estimated lateral travel distance in a 6 mile per hour (10 km/hr) breeze is 223.7 feet (62.8 m) [52]. Since seed dispersal occurs at a time of year when water levels are declining after spring floods, water dispersal often results in seed deposition on muddy flats that are highly conducive to germination [44,83]. Sycamore seeds do not require any pretreatment for good germination [9]. They do require very moist conditions for good germination and are tolerant of inundation [83]. Soaking seeds in water for up to 32 days did not reduce germination rates; the seeds did not germinate during the soaking period [40]. Sycamore seeds germinated at a significantly higher percentage in light than in dark [54]; they do not germinate well in heavy litter or in deep shade [78]. Sycamore seeds did not germinate in laboratory tests at temperatures lower than 59 degrees Fahrenheit (15 deg C); they germinated well at temperatures between 59 and 86 degrees Fahrenheit (15-30 deg C), with maximum emergence at 68 degrees Fahrenheit (20 deg C) in the wetter part of a moisture gradient [18]. Sycamore seedlings require direct sunlight for good growth and establishment [78]. At the end of their first year, sycamore seedlings on clay soil showed better height growth in partial shade than in full sun. On alluvial soil or loess, height growth was better in full sun [7]. Seedling roots penetrate the soil quickly and grow deeper in loess soils than in alluvial or clay soils [78]. Young sycamore stems sprout readily from the stump; sycamore is not a vigorous epicormic sprouter. Sycamore can be vegetatively propagated by cuttings [78]. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Sycamore is primarily a species of alluvial soils along streams and in bottomlands, but occurs occasionally as a pioneer on drier upland slopes [13,30.78]. It occurs on a wide variety of soils, including both sands and clays [57]. Its best growth occurs on sandy loams or loams with a good supply of ground water but it also occurs on wet muck, shallow peat and other, more poorly drained bottomland soils [78]. Sycamore occurs on a variety of wet sites, including shallow swamps, sloughs, and very wet riverbottoms where soil is saturated 2 to 4 months during the growing season [39]. Sycamore seedlings survived almost 2 months of continuously waterlogged soils [46]. In a greenhouse experiment, after experiencing 60 days of completely waterlogged soils, about half of current-year seedlings died shortly after their removal from the water; none died with shorter treatment periods [41]. Sycamore is more tolerant of poorly drained soils in the northern parts of its range. It was given an adaptation value of 7.5 (out of a maximum of 10) for moisture tolerance [1]. Sycamore has a recommended lower pH range of 4.0 to 4.5 [77] Sycamore is rated as moderately tolerant of flooding. In the Northeast, sycamore occurs on sites with greater than 98 percent probability of flooding in any given year [56]. In Illinois, sites that experience flooding approximately 3 months of the year are dominated by silver maple, sycamore, and green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica var. lanceolata). These sites are usually flooded before the growing season; sycamore is intolerant of flooding during the growing season and will die if the entire tree is inundated for more than 2 weeks [78]. Saplings may be more resilient than mature trees due to their higher sprouting capacity; Baker [4] reported that even though 4 weeks of flooding appeared to have killed 65 percent of sycamore saplings, 90 percent of the saplings were alive at the end of one growing season following flooding. Most of them had only been top-killed and subsequently sprouted from the root crown [4]. Seedlings are less tolerant of flooding than larger plants simply because they are more likely to be completely covered by water during active growth. Only 28.8 percent of scyamore seedlings survived complete inundation for 5 days during a June flood as compared to a survival rate of 88.9 percent for unflooded seedlings [46]. The elevational range of sycamore extends from sea level to 1,000 feet (305 m) in the northern parts of its range and to 2,500 feet (762 m) in the southern Appalachians [13,78]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Facultative Seral Species Sycamore is intolerant of shade. Seedling growth is greatly reduced in deep shade (defined as 5 percent of full sunlight) [45]. Sycamore occurs in forest types that are pioneer, transitional, subclimax, and climax [31,78]. Sycamore will pioneer on sand and gravel bars and other newly formed land, often persisting through later seres, such as sugar maple (Acer saccharum)-bitternut hickory (Carya cordiformis), particularly on wet sites [78]. It is an occasional pioneer on upland oldfield sites, particularly in the central parts of its range. In Illinois, sycamore was the most common tree species present in the seed rain or as seedlings in local old fields [18]. In southern Illinois, 1- to 5-year-old sycamore seedlings were most common on newly formed land, then on old fields, in cottonwood-willow communities, and in soft mixed-hardwoods (elms, ashes, birches [Betula spp.], silver maple, and red maple [Acer rubrum]); there were no seedlings present in hard mixed-hardwood communities (oaks and hickories) [85]. Sycamore usually replaces willows (Salix spp.) and eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides). The sycamore-sweetgum-American elm type usually succeeds cottonwood on river fronts, but may pioneer on heavily cutover sites or old fields in bottomlands. This type may persist as a subclimax type where repeated disturbances such as flooding occur. It is usually succeeded by swamp chestnut oak (Quercus michauxii)-cherrybark oak or sweetgum-willow oak (Liquidambar styraciflua-Q. phellos) [31]. In the North Carolina Piedmont, sycamore and river birch (Betula nigra) usually replace alders (Alnus spp.) and willows on small islands or spits in streams after the land becomes stable and moderately well drained [78]. Sycamore and river birch are usually followed by elms (Ulmus spp.), ash (Fraxinus spp.) and red maple [78]. In Kentucky, an island that formed in 1913 was occupied by a pure stand of eastern cottonwood 30 to 40 feet tall by 1922. Trees coming in among the cottonwoods included sycamores [67]. The presence of sycamore in upland climax forests may be a function of disturbance rather than a function of moisture or drainage regime; its establishment in these woods may require larger disturbances than those produced by single or multiple tree falls [8]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Sycamore flowers appear in May in the northern parts of its range, and as early as late March in the South. Late spring frosts will kill flowers, leaves, and twigs [78]. The fruits ripen from September to October or November, and usually remain on the tree over winter, breaking up or falling off the following spring from February through April [9,78].

Related categories for Species: Platanus occidentalis | Sycamore

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