An individual instance of Celtis laevigata (sugarberry)
Image of organism
Permanent unique identifier for this particular organism:

http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/10-185


Notes:


This large sugarberry on the south side of the Community Partnership House is typical of the large hackberries in the arboretum. It has a very large diameter of 131 cm, exceeded only by some of the largest oaks and magnolias.

This tree helps illustrate the variability seen in the bark of hackberries. It's bark is much knobbier than the bark of its partner on the other side of the building, and the bark on the lower trunk of this tree is so rough that it is almost not recognizable as a hackberry.


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Use this stable URL to link to this page:
http://bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/10-185.htm


This organism is a living specimen that is part of the  Vanderbilt University Arboretum  with the local identifier 4-522.


This particular organism is believed to have managed means of establishment.

This organismal entity has the scope: multicellular organism.

Remarks: Cut down sometime before 2017-03-22.


Identifications:


Celtis laevigata

Willd.

sec. fna.org 1993

common name: sugarberry
family: Ulmaceae
Identified 2014-08-27 by Steven J. Baskauf


Location:


south of the Community Partnership House, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, US
Click on these geocoordinates to load a map showing the location: 36.14427°, -86.80406°
Coordinate uncertainty about: 10 m.

Location of individual determined from GIS database.



Occurrences were recorded for this particular organism on the following dates:
2014-08-27

The following images document this particular organism.
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Image View
whole tree (or vine) - general
bark - of a large tree

fna.org 1993 =

Flora of North America Editorial Committee, eds., 1993. Flora of North America North of Mexico. Flora of North America Association, New York, NY, US and Oxford, UK.


Metadata last modified: 2019-10-16T22:24:42.018-05:00
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