| Leaves:
Alternate; simple; broadly ovate; 1" to 3" long and 1"
to 2" wide; deciduous; entire margin or with a few teeth; acuminate
apex; rounded base; thick; light green and rough or smooth above;
lighter beneath with obvious reticulated or net-like small veins;
petiole 1/8" to 1/2" long.
Twigs/buds: Twigs slender; gray-brown. No terminal bud; lateral
buds small, pointed, pressed against the twig.
Flowers/fruit: Fruit a drupe; 1/4" in diameter; round; yellow
to orange-red; one per stem; on stalks 1/2" to 3/4" long;
ripen in fall.
Bark: Thick, red-brown to gray-brown; smooth when young; develops
short ridges somewhat like common hackberry when older.
Wood: Little known or used; ring-porous; likely similar to common
hackberry.
General: Native to scattered areas of the West and Southwest, including
much of Utah. Found on dry foothill or valley sites. Intermediate
shade tolerance.
Landscape Use: This native hackberry is rarely planted in Utah
and is not easy to obtain. It would be a good candidate where little
supplemental water will be available and where a large tree is not
needed. Expect a slow to moderate growth rate. Zones 5(4?)-9.
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