
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 …
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 …
Celtis laevigata - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Celtis laevigata, commonly called sugarberry, sugar hackberry or southern hackberry, is basically a southern version of common or northern hackberry (see C. occidentalis). Sugarberry differs …
Hackberry - Grow Native!
While the preferred planting site is in rich moist soil, this tree is very adaptable and will grow in a variety of soil and moisture conditions including dry soil and windy areas. A reliable all-purpose …
HACKBERRY - CELTIS OCCIDENTALIS | The UFOR Nursery & Lab
Common Name: hackberry. Scientific Name: Family: Cannabaceae Genus: Celtis Species: C. occidentalis Hardiness Zone: 2 to 9 Height: 40 to 60 ft Width: 40 to 60 ft . Common …
Celtis pumila - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Celtis pumila, commonly called dwarf hackberry, is a small, deciduous tree or large shrub native to the southern and eastern United States where it is found sparsely scattered in the central …
Common Hackberry | WashU Arboretum - Washington University …
The Common Hackberry is a tree with a versatile suite of benefits. Not only is it a favorite of birds for its berries or insects for host habitat, but it is remarkably adaptive to a wide range of …
Hackberry | Rowan University's Arboretum
Hackberry is a deciduous broadleaf tree that sheds its serrated, knifelike leaves annually. Hackberry are angiosperms, or flowering plants, that produce inconspicuous greenish flowers …
Celtis occidentalis page - missouriplants.com
Hackberry grows across Missouri, as well as the northeastern third or so of the continental U.S. The flowers open before the leaves, and are usually difficult to observe since they are high up …
Hackberry Psyllids (Hackberry Nipple Gall Makers) | Missouri …
Hackberry psyllids (pron. SILL-ids) are a genus of tiny, planthopper-like bugs. As larvae, they develop within the leaves, twigs, buds, or bark of hackberry trees. The trees form warty galls in …
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