Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Black Cherry, An Important North American Tree
Black Cherry, An Important North American Tree          The blackà  cherry or Prunus serotina is a species in the subgenus Padus with beautiful flowerà  clusters, each separate flower attached by short equal stalks and calledà  racemes. All cherries in the landscape or forest share this floral design and often used asà  specimens in yards and parks.         All true cherries are deciduous trees and shed their leaves before winter dormancy. Prunus serotina,à  also commonly called wild black cherry, rum cherry, or mountain black cherry, is a woody plant species belonging to the genus Prunus. This cherry is native to eastern North America from southern Quebec and Ontario south to Texas and central Florida, with disjunct populations in Arizona and New Mexico, and in the mountains of Mexico and Guatemala.         This North American native tree usually grows toà  60 but can grow as tall as 145 feet on exceptional sites. The bark of young trees are smooth but become fissured and scaly as the trees trunk enlarges with age. The leaves are alternate in rank, simple in shape, and narrowly oval, 4 inches long with finely toothed margins. Leaf texture is glabrous (smooth) and commonly with reddish hairs along the midrib beneath and near the base (see leaf anatomy).          The Cherrys Beautiful Flowers and Fruit      The flowers inflorescence (meaningà  the complete flower head of a plant including stems, stalks, bracts, and flowers)à  is very attractive. Thisà  flower head is five inches long at the end of leafy twigs of the Spring season, with numerous 1/3 white flowers with five petals.         The fruits are berry-like, about 3/4 in diameter, and turn black purple when ripe. The actual seed in the berry is a single, black, ovoid stone. The common name black cherry is derivedà  from the black color of the ripe fruits.à            Dark Side of a Black Cherry      The leaves, twigs, barkà  and seeds of black cherry produceà  a chemical called cyanogenic glycoside.à  Hydrogen cyanide is released when the living parts of plant material are chewed and eaten and are toxic to both human and animal. It has a very repulsive taste and that taste is one of the identifying factors of the tree.         Most poisoning comes from livestock eating wilted leaves, which contain more of the toxin than fresh leaves but with a diminishing of the bad taste. Interestingly enough, white-tailed deer browse seedlings and saplings without harm.         The inner bark has highly concentrated forms of the chemical but was actually used ethnobotanically in much of the Appalachian states as a cough remedy, tonic, and sedative. The glycoside seems to reduce spasms in the smooth muscles lining bronchioles. Still, very large amounts of black cherry pose the theoretical risk of causing cyanide poisoning. à  Ã            Dormant Identification of Black Cherry      The tree has narrow corky and light, horizontal lenticels. Lenticels in black cherry are one of many vertically raised pores in the stem of a woody plant that allows gas exchange between the atmosphere and the internal tissuesà  on the bark of a young tree.         The cherry bark breaks into thin dark plates and raised edges on older wood are described as burnt cornflakes. You can safely taste the twig that has what has been described as a bitter almond taste. The cherry bark is dark grey but can be both smooth and scaly with reddish-brown inner bark.          The Most Common North American Hardwood List      ash:à  Genusà  Fraxinusà  basswood:à  Genusà  Tiliaà  birch:à  Genusà  Betulaà  black cherry:à  Genusà  Prunusà  black walnut/butternut:à  Genusà  Juglansà  cottonwood:à  Genusà  Populusà  elm: Genusà  Ulmusà  hackberry:à  Genusà  Celtisà  hickory:à  Genusà  Caryaà  holly:à  Genusà  IIexà  locust: Genusà  Robiniaà  andà  Gleditsiaà  magnolia:à  Genusà  Magnoliaà  maple:à  Genusà  Acerà  oak:à  Genusà  Quercusà  poplar:à  Genusà  Populusà  red alder:à  Genusà  Alnusà  royal paulownia:à  Genusà  Paulowniaà  sassafras:à  Genusà  Sassafrasà  sweetgum:à  Genusà  Liquidambarà  sycamore:à  Genusà  Platanusà  tupelo: Genusà  Nyssaà  willow:Genusà  Salixà  yellow-poplar:à  Genusà  Liriodendron    
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