A single American plum (Prunus americana) tree in Bobolink Meadow in full, exuberant bloom.
American plum is a large shrub or small (about 25 feet) tree with spreading branches and, often, with multiple trunks. The bark is dark gray, gray-brown, or reddish brown. The smaller branches tend to be contorted, with numerous stout, pointed twigs or spines; once your eye moves on from the leaves, the spikiness of this plant is striking. Leaves are alternate, a bit over twice as long as wide, dark glossy green on top, paler and hairless on the underside, shallowly serrated along their margins with a sharply pointed tip and a petiole about one-third the length of the leaf. The edges of the leaves undulate so the leaf tends to be concave. Flowers first appear before or at leaf emergence; they occur in roughly spherical clusters (umbels) of two to five flowers, arising from leaf axils. Each flower is about 1″ across, held away from the twig at the base of the umbel on 1/2-1″ petioles; there are five egg-shaped petals with narrow bases, white with a touch of pink, five narrow, somewhat fleshy, green sepals much shorter than the petals, a single style, and numerous (10-30) stamens with tan anthers. The fruits are about 1″ across, initially green but turning reddish-purple with the waxy bloom typical of plums when ripe; inside is a single seed (a “stone,” like a peach). Because this tree usually flowers when the leaves are only beginning to open, it produces an especially showy display. It is widespread across Jackson Park.
American plum (Prunus americana) trunks, twigs, and bark. Top right: the two major branches of an American plum tree about 25 feet tall. The plates of bark are perforated in numerous places by holes made by yellow-bellied sapsuckers (Sphyrapicus varius). Top left: A small branch with tan-colored bark and numerous white lenticels. Bottom: a twig from the same tree showing the spike-like twiglets.
American plum is a large shrub or small (about 25 feet) tree with spreading branches and, often, with multiple trunks. The bark is dark gray, gray-brown, or reddish brown. The smaller branches tend to be contorted, with numerous stout, pointed twigs or spines; once your eye moves on from the leaves, the spikiness of this plant is striking.

