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hackberry

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hackberry

[′hak‚ber·ē]
(botany)
Celtis occidentalis. A tree of the eastern United States characterized by corky or warty bark, and by alternate, long-pointed serrate leaves unequal at the base; produces small, sweet, edible drupaceous fruit.
Any of several other trees of the genus Celtis.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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hackberry

hackberry

One of the oldest foraged foods, going back half a million years. Tiny berries 1/4 inch (.63cm) on tree from fall to spring. Orange-red when ripe. Berries are thin skin around large, hard seed. Seed is also edible. Skin can be sucked off, but best way to consume is to crush entire berries in mortar and pestle into a sweet delicious nutritious mush. This paste can be eaten raw or dried into a “food bar”. Seeds can be blended and strained into a milk just like almond milk. Tree bark is lumpy with wart-like growths all over it. Indians used hackberry for sore throats, colds and menstrual regulation.
Edible Plant Guide © 2012 Markus Rothkranz
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Hackberry

 

(Celtis), a genus of deciduous or more rarely evergreen trees of the family Ulmaceae. The leaves are asymmetrical and serrated, with three veins at the base. The blossoms are opaque and polygamous, with a simple five-membered perianth. The fruit is a drupe. There are about 50 species in tropical and arid regions of the temperate zones in the western and eastern hemispheres. In the USSR there are two species. Caucasian hackberry (C. caucasicd) is a tree up to 20 m tall with grayish green downy leaves that grows in the Caucasus and Middle Asia. Smooth hackberry (C. glabratd) is 4– m tall and grows on dry rocky slopes of the Crimea and Caucasus.

Hackberry is widely used for greenery and for protective for-estation, especially in arid regions. The fruit is edible; the leavesare used for animal fodder and the bark in tanning hides. Thewood is hard and durable; it is used in cabinetry, woodworking, and carving.

I. A. GRUDZINSKAIA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Tree-of-heaven had lower dominance than sugarberry, pecan, or cedar elm with higher density (95.0 plants/ha) than pecan and about the same density as cedar elm.
The most common trees include sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), osage-orange (Maclura pomifera), chinquapin oak (Quercus muhlenbergii), and elms (especially Ulmus americana).
We found the vegetation of the ephemeral pools to be overtopped by a canopy that consisted of sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), box elder (Acer negundo), black willow (Salix nigra), green hawthorn (Crataegus viridis), and red haw (Crataegus mollis) with a shrub component of black elderberry (Sambucus nigra), swamp dogwood (Cornus foemina), buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis), and dwarf palmetto (Sabal minor).
In addition to direct colonization of old fields, red cedar can invade thickets of the species noted in the previous section (h), along with sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), ashes (F.
The predominant tree species of bottomland hardwood forest in southwestern Indiana include sweet gum (Liquidambar styraciflua), hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), red elm (Ulmus rubra), shagbark hickory (Carva ovata), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), box elder (Acer negundo), silver maple (Acer saccharinum), butternut (Jughms cinerea), and northern red oak (Quercus rubra).
glauca 126 130 30 1975 STOPPER Boxleaf Eugenia foetida 1999 12 25 9 Red Eugenia rhombea 1999 19 28 11 Redberry Eugenia confusa 1993 61 41 20 White Eugenia axillaris 1993 17 25 7 STRONGBACK Bahama Bourreria ovata 1999 37 33 17 SUGARBERRY Celtis laevigata 2007 221 82 36 SUMAC Evergreen Rhus virens [dagger] 2005 31 14 27 Evergreen Rhus virens [dagger] 2006 37 15 16 Littleleaf Rhus microphylla 2007 13 14 20 Mearns Rhus choriophylla 2007 21 20 16 Prairie Rhus lanceolata 1994 72 26 45 Shining Rhus copallina [dagger] 29 35 24 2007 Shining Rhus copallina [dagger] 38 29 32 2000 Smooth Rhus glabra 2001 36 52 28 Staghorn Rhus typhina 1985 50 57 41 Sugar Rhus ovata 1995 71 34 36 SWAMP-PRIVET Forestiera acuminata 2007 31 46 29 SWAMPBAY Persea borbonia var.
Most hackberry comes from Celtis occidentalis, but another similar species, Celtis laevigata, or sugarberry, is sometimes sold commercially under the name hackberry.
Taylor and Wooten [35] looked at variation from pith to bark for SG, fiber length, fiber dimensions, and volumetric composition in black willow, willow oak, sycamore, pecan, and sugarberry. Taylor [34] also investigated juvenile wood effects on SG and fiber length in black-gum, mockernut hickory, post oak, shagbark hickory, and southern red oak.
Subdominant woody species in the savanna included Prosopis glandulosa, Celtis laevigata (Texas sugarberry), and Diospyros texana (Texas persimmon).
lyrata), sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua), sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanicus), black willow (Salix nigra), and baldcypress (Taxodium distichum).
Four plant species [live oak (Quercus virginiana Mill.; Fagales: Fagaceae), holly (Ilex cornuta Lindl.; Aquifoliales: Aquifoliaceae), magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora L.; Magnoliales: Magnoliaceae) and sugarberry (Celtis laevigata Willd.; Urticales: Ulmaceae)] that were infested with at least 1 honeydew-producing hemipteran species, and had trails of N.
Riparian habitat occurs on steep limestone bluffs along the Colorado River and is dominated by tall trees of Pecan (Carya illinoensis), American elm (Ulmus americana), sugarberry (Celtis laevigata), and sycamore (Platanus occidentalis) (Schwausch 1997).
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