Skip to main content

Hackberry

Celtis occidentalis L.

Images

Click on image to view full size

Hackberry bark
Hackberry bark
Hackberry leaf
Hackberry fruit
Hackberry
Hackberry bark
Hackberry bud
Hackberry bark
Hackberry flowers
Hackberry flowers
Hackberry leaves
Hackberry bark
Hackberry fruit and leaf
Hackberry leaf
Hackberry bud
Hackberry bud
Hackberry fruit
Hackberry galls

Morphology

Trunk
Straight, short, 1-2+ feet in diameter; crown rounded, somewhat open; branches few, large, often 20-30 feet above ground; branchlets many, slender, somewhat horizontal; bark on old trees thick, light grayish-brown, deeply furrowed ridged or with wart-like protuberances; ridges short, narrow; hackberry can sometimes be a gnarly shrub.
Twigs
Slender, zigzag, reddish-brown to gray or black, slightly pubescent; terminal bud absent; lateral buds egg-shaped, 1/4 inch long, pointed, flattened, pale brown; leaf scars small, crescent shaped; bundle scars 3.
Leaves
Alternate, simple, deciduous, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 2 to 4.8 inches long, 1.2 to 2.4 inches wide, thin; surfaces rough, yellowish-green above, paler beneath; margins coarsely toothed, entire at base; tip usually tapering to long point; base with unequal sides; stalk short, slender, pubescent.
Flowers
With or soon after leaves, inconspicuous, male and female flowers on same branch; staminate flowers in clusters; sepals 5-6, yellowish-green, tips brown; petals absent; stamens 5; pistillate flowers usually solitary in upper leaf axils; calyx deeply 5-lobed, green; corolla absent; ovary green; stigmas 2, yellow, curved.
Fruit
September-October; drupe, fleshy, spherical, 1/3 to 1/2 inch in diameter, dark orange to dark purple when ripe, edible; seed spherical, cream-colored; stalk slender, to 3/5 inch long; fruits can remain on tree through mid-winter.

Ecology

Habitat
Stream banks, flood plains, open woods, rocky hillsides; rich or poor soils; may grow on any site with sufficient moisture.
Distribution
Throughout Kansas

Practical Information

Uses
Native Americans would dry and pulverize the fruit and use it to season meat. The bark was boiled and the liquid taken for sore throats and the inner bark was fed to horses. Sometimes hackberry is planted as an ornamental street tree. The wood was used for boxes and furniture.

Additional Notes

Comments

Hackberry is a highly variable species that can vary in size from a large to small tree or shrub. It is drought tolerant. The wood is heavy, weak, coarse-grained, pale yellow to nearly white. The leaves often have galls and disease sometimes causes dense clusters of deformed twigs along the branches.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Ulmaceae - Elm Family
Height
20-80+ feet
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2010-08-14
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: April, May