Black Cherry  Missouri Department of Conservation

Black Cherry Missouri Department of Conservation

5
(462)
Write Review
More
$ 11.00
Add to Cart
In stock
Description

Black cherry is a medium to large tree with a straight trunk, somewhat hanging branches, and a rather spreading, rounded crown. Leaves are alternate, simple, with a leathery texture, rounded at base, 2–6 inches long, 1–2 inches wide, elliptical; margin finely toothed with teeth turning inward. Upper surface dark green, shiny; lower surface paler with hairs along the midvein; leaf stalk with small glands near the leaf base. Bark is dark reddish brown, smooth when young; black, broken into small, scaly plates with turned-back edges with age. Twigs are slender, flexible, smooth, reddish- or olive brown with a grayish coating; pores small, numerous; with an extremely bitter almond taste and smell upon scratching. Flowers April–May in dense, elongated, cylindrical clusters, 2–3 inches long, flowers about ¼ inch across, with 5 white petals. Fruits August–September, clusters with 15–30 fruits, each round, dark purple to black, ¼–½ inch across, shiny, thin-skinned, with juicy flesh, bittersweet, edible.

Organic Wild Berries at Kansas City Area Farm

Fifty Common Trees of Missouri : Missouri Department of Conservation : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

Black Walnut Capital of the World– Walrus Oil

Prunus serotina - Wikipedia

Black Cherry Natural Resource Stewardship

Right Species, Right Place: Considerations Before You Order Tree Seedlings in Missouri

Wild black cherry - flowering time, description, seasonal development and general distribution in Missouri

Missouri Conservation Nursery Buying Tree Seeds From The Public, Lake of the Ozarks News

Discover Nature: Black Chokeberries

Eagle Bluffs Conservation Area - All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (2024)

Wild black cherry - flowering time, description, seasonal development and general distribution in Missouri

Missouri Dept of Conservation (@moconservation) • Instagram photos and videos

The unsung pawpaw is a delicious, low-maintenance, native N. American fruit tree

Can you recognize these toxic plants of Missouri? - Missouri Poison Center