the magnolia family

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Magnoliaceae
The Magnolia Family
Magnoliaceae (the magnolia family)
• 2 main genera worldwide, both represented in Delaware
• Magnolia (240 worldwide)
• Liriodendron (2 worldwide)
• Tropical and temperate regions
•Most species are small to large trees
•Stems and leaves of the Magnoliaceae contain one-celled oil glands
• Flowers solitary, perfect, showy
•Fruits are varies within family, most common is aggregate of follicles
•Receptacle elongated, becomes woody as fruits mature
•Stipular scars go all the way around the twig
• Popular ornamentals and shade trees
• Not commercially important
• Traditional medicinal uses
sweetbay magnolia
Magnolia virginiana (Magnoliaceae)
• Elliptical leaves
• Evergreen farther south, deciduous here
• Leaves dark green above, white below
• Twigs have a spicy taste
• 2” fragrant yellow flowers in spring
• Fruit = 2” aggregate of capsules with
bright red seeds inside
• Smooth gray bark
• The only magnolia native to
Delaware
• Common as a small tree on
moist to wet sites throughout
Delaware
• A good choice for
ornamental planting where
you need a small tree
southern magnolia
Magnolia grandiflora (Magnoliaceae)
• Evergreen with large elliptical leaves
• Many parts rusty tomentose – leaf undersides, buds, twigs
• Stout twigs
• Big white flowers in spring
• Fruit, aggregate, contains bright red capsules
• Smooth gray bark cracks to form plates
• Native in southern swamps, not in DE
• Planted throughout Delaware
yellow-poplar
Liriodendron tulipifera (Magnoliaceae)
• Large leaf with truncate apex
• Valvate buds
• Bark furrowed with zig-zag ridges, brown to gray
• Showy flowers in spring, look like tulips
• Fruit is an aggregate of samaras. Samaras fall off to leave “toothpick”
• Native throughout Delaware
• A very tall, straight forest tree
• Shade-intolerant, early successional
• Wood is valuable, used for cabinets & furniture
Ulmaceae
The Elm Family
Ulmaceae (the elm family)
• 15-18 genera, around 100 species – mostly shrubs or trees
•Temperate to tropical, especially in the northern hemispere
• Delaware has two native genera
• Ulmus – elm
• Celtis – hackberry
• Leaves alternate & simple, stipulate
• Often inequilateral leaf bases
•Plants can be synoecious, monoecious or polygamous
•Inflorescence of solitary or clustered axillary flowers
•Flowers perfect or imperfect, petals absent
• Fruit a samara or drupe
Ulmus – Delaware’s two elms
Ulmus americana and Ulmus rubra
• Samaras = seeds with papery wings around them
• Leaves doubly serrate, prominent veins, inequilateral bases
• Bark has winding flat-topped ridges
• Vase-shaped form
• Flowers in early
spring, rather
inconspicuous
Delaware’s two elms – Side by Side
Leaves
Flowers
Samaras
Twigs
American elm
(Ulmus americana)
slippery elm
(Ulmus rubra)
Sometimes scabrous,
sometimes not
Always very scabrous
(90-grit sandpaper)
Long stems
Deep notch at apex,
ciliate margins
Not scabrous
Very short stems
Emarginate apex,
smooth margins
Scabrous
Ulmus
Dutch elm disease was introduced around 1930 and has killed
most of our American elms. Other diseases have further
reduced this genus to secondary status in the USA. A diseaseresistant variety of Ulmus americana called Princeton elm is
now available, but whether we’ll see a resurgence of the elms
remains to be seen….
hackberry
Celtis occidentalis (Ulmaceae)
• Leaves ovate to lanceolate, serrate except near the base
• Often has deforming insect galls all over the leaves and twigs
• Warty bark
• Zig zag twigs
• Fruit a ½ inch drupe, purple, September
• A small tree
• Native in Delaware’s forests, but not common. Occasional ornamental.
WARTY
BARK
Japanese zelkova
Zelkova serrata (Ulmaceae)
• Planted throughout Delaware as a street tree
• Not native but not invasive
• Has replaced many American elms killed by Dutch elm disease
• Serrate leaf margins (not doubly serrate like elms)
• Drupes instead of samaras
• Branches angle steeply up from trunk
Moraceae
The Mulberry Family
Moraceae (the mulberry family)
• 40-70 genera and more than 1,000 species worldwide, mainly tropical
•Only 2 genera are indigenous to temperate North America
• Morus (mulberry)
• Maclura (Osage-orange)
•Shrubs or trees (rarely herbs) usually with milky sap
•Leaves alternate, simple, stipulate,
•Plants monoecious or dioecious
•Inflorescence variable, usually reduced or condensed, petals absent
• Fruit usually a drupe. In most genera the densely clustered flowers
and the accessory tissue ripen together as a multiple fruit- some quite
large
Morus – Delaware’s two mulberries
Morus rubra and Morus alba
• Fruit = multiple of drupelets resembling a raspberry.
• Leaves variably lobed with 0-3 lobes. Milky sap oozes
from base of petiole when leaf is pulled from twig.
• Bark has shallow furrows.
• Small trees.
Our mulberries are not
commercially important
but the fruits are eaten by
birds and other animals.
Delaware’s two mulberries – Side by Side
Leaves
Fruit
red mulberry
(Morus rubra)
white mulberry
(Morus alba)
Scabrous above
Smooth and shiny
above
Dark purple
Tolerance
Shade tolerant
Native?
Native, somewhat
uncommon
Various colors but never
dark purple
Intolerant
Invasive from China,
very common
Osage-orange
Maclura pomifera (Moraceae)
• Cannot be misidentified if fruit is present. A multiple of drupes that looks
like a softball-sized green brain. Oozes a milky sap when crushed.
• Twigs have sharp thorns.
• Leaves have long acuminate tips, bleed milky sap.
• Orange deeply furrowed bark on old trees.
• Wood is used for bows.
• Originally from Arkansas and Texas.
• Found in hedgerows in Delaware.
Aquifoliaceae
The Holly Family
Aquifoliaceae (the holly family)
• 4 genera, 400 species. Cosmopolitan
•Shrubs or trees
• Leaves alternate, rarely opposite, simple, stipluate
•Plants synoecious or dioecious
•Inflorescence of solitary or clustered axillary flowers
•Fruit a drupe or berry
American holly
Ilex opaca (Aquifoliaceae)
•Easy to ID with bristly, stiff, dark green, evergreen leaves
• Smooth gray bark
•Dioecious, with female trees producing red drupes
•Delaware’s state tree
•Very shade tolerant but small size when full-grown
•Common throughout DE in the understory
•Formerly important commercially for holiday wreaths
•Wood is used for inlay and decoration
•Birds eat the berries