Alternate Budded Trees with False Terminal Buds II

Carpinus caroliniana

Blue-beech

Blue-beech (Carpinus caroliniana) has very slender twigs, the appressed buds are tiny and the bud scales have greenish-white edges. The bark is gray and ridged. This small tree’s trunk has the feel of a muscle, giving rise to the common name Muscle-wood.

Celtis occidentalis

Hackberry

Celtis occidentalis

Hackberry twig

 

 

Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) has chambered pith. The twigs are slender with flattened buds, the bud tips normally touching the twig.

 

 

Cercis canadensis

Redbud

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Redbud (Cercis canadensis) is a small tree native to floodplains and rich wet bottomlands in southern Michigan. It is also widely planted as an ornamental. The buds are black and tiny so the dark zig-zag twigs of this tree appear to be dead. The rounded stalked flower buds are found on the second year and older twigs. Most trees will have a few seedpods that look like brown peapods (it is in the Fabaceae, Pea Family).

Morus alba

White Mulberry

 

White Mulberry (Morus alba) has slender twigs with the buds offset to the leaf scars. It is not native to Michigan but has been imported from China.

Ostrya virginiana

Hop-hornbeam

 

 

In Hop-hornbeam (Ostrya virginiana) the twigs are very slender, with small divergent buds. Its bud scales are striped. The bark has fine plates so it resembles a cat scratched surface.

Ulmus

L-R Siberian, American, and Slippery Elm

 

 

American Elm (Ulmus americana) has buds that are two ranked (meaning in two rows). It has three bundle scars and bud tips without hairs.

Slippery Elm (Ulmus rubra) has buds that are two ranked. It has three bundle scars and bud tips with reddish-brown hairs. Its twigs often have conspicuous reddish flower buds.

Siberian Elm (Ulmus pumila) is native to eastern Siberia and northern China. The leaf buds are small and reddish. The flower buds are rounder. It escapes into woodlots in Michigan.

Alternate Twig Look-a-likes

Alternate Twig Look-a-likes

 

Bud Look-a-likes

Bud Look-a-likes

Copyright 2013 by Donald Drife
Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
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Alternate Budded Trees with False Terminal Buds I

False Terminal Buds

False Terminal Buds

A false terminal bud is nothing more than a former leaf bud located at the end of a twig. True terminal buds do not have leaf scars, false terminal buds do. Some authors say that the terminal buds are absent.

 

 

Fagus grandifolia


American Beech

 

American Beech (Fagus grandifolia) has buds 3 to 5 times longer than wide. The buds are two ranked (meaning in two rows) and held almost at right angles to the stem.

 

 

 

Gymnocladus dioicus

Kentucky Coffeetree

Kentucky Coffeetree (Gymnocladus dioicus) is a rare native tree in southern Michigan. The twigs are stout, each large bud scar has two buds and normally 5 bundle scars but 3 or 4 bundle scars are seen. Most trees will have a few seedpods that look like dark brown peapods (it is in the Fabaceae, Pea Family).

Platanus occidentialis

Sycamore

 

Sycamore (Platanus occidentalis) is found in floodplains in southern Michigan. The mottled bark is distinctive giving the tree a diseased appearance. The buds are surrounded by the leaf scar.

 

 

Salix spp.

Willow

 

Willow (Salix spp.) is easy to identify in the winter. It has slender twigs and one bud scale.

 

 

 

Tilia americana

Basswood

 

Basswood (Tilia americana) has reddish (or greenish) asymmetrical buds that are offset from the leaf scar. Each bud has two bud scales. Each bud scar has two small stipule scars.
Copyright 2013 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
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