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of Maple Nature Preserve in cooperation with ACRES Land Trust

Oaks Maple Tulip Poplar trees vary in shape and bark Liriodendron texture. Their unifying characteristic is Sugar Maple tulipifera that they all produce acorns. hard maple Black Oak spring’s specially sought also called Yellow Poplar or Quercus velutina sweet sap specimen Tulip , it is the state tree for Indiana and Tennessee Maple Bur Oak soft maple with Quercus macrocarpa toothed edges grows in uplands Box Elder Chinkapin Oak Silver Maple the only compound Quercus muehlenbergii Acer saccarinum leaf maple soft maple with deeply cut lobes often growing in wet areas Pin Oak Quercus palustris Nut Trees all are in the walnut family with the exception of American American Beech Pignut Red Oak Fagus grandifolia Carya glabra Quercus rubra beech family nut husk usually smooth “elephant leg”bark splits to center Butternut Shagbark Hickory cinera Carya ovata Swamp White Oak oblong nut bark hangs in long Quercus bicolor also called white walnut peeling strips Bitternut Hickory Shellbark Hickory Carya cordiformus Carya laciniosa White Oak similar to pignut with nut husk usually Quercus alba one obvious difference splits to base more Trees of Maple Wood Nature Preserve small trees Odd-shaped Beautiful Hawthorn Two of our trees do not have consistent shaped leaves. Any of their leaves Createagus pulcherima could fit one of three variations. Rose family Sassafras Sassafras albidum Bladdernut Laurel family Staphylea triofolia smooth-edged leaves Bladdernut family orange or reddish bark puffy “bladder” pods Choke Cherry White Mulberry virginiana Morus alba Rose family Mulberry family tooth-edged leaves Flowering Dogwood Cornus florida Dogwood family white spring blossoms American Basswood Slippery americana Ulmus rubra American Linden family Elm family Carpinus caroliniana soft grain, popular for carving unique textured leaves family also called Musclewood, American Elm Blue Beech or Ironwood Ulmas americana Platanus occidentalis Hophornbeam Elm family Sycamore family Ostrya virginiana most large specimens are grows near flowing water Birch family gone due to blight also called Ironwood

Eastern Cottonwood White Ash Paw Paw Populous deltoides americana Asimina triloba family Olive family Annona family fast growing grows the “Indiana banana”

Hackberry Wild Black Cherry Prickly Ash Celtis occidentalis Prunus serotina Zanthozylum americanum Elm family Rose family Rue (citrus) family corky bark highly prized for spines along twigs

Large-toothed Witch- Populous granditentata Hamamelis virginiana Willow family Witch-hazel family favored by beavers blooms in the fall