Common hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) flowers. All the common hackberry flowers shown here are perfect; they have both male parts (stamens) and female parts (an ovary and style). Right: a pair of common hackberry flowers with the stamens cupped by sepals. The pistil is bright green with a large, bifurcated fuzzy style reminiscent of those on black walnut (Juglans nigra) female flowers. Top left: a pair of perfect flowers of common hackberry. The lower flower is just opening; the stamens are not yet spread. Bottom left: looking up into a perfect common hackberry flower. The large tan anthers and the fuzzy styles are the most obvious features.
Common hackberry is ubiquitous in Jackson Park. It is a hardy tree tolerant of drought and adverse conditions with distinctive bark; it reaches heights of 40-80′. The trunk is brownish gray with deep furrows in the bark that form distinctive ridges composed of multiple “corky” layers (insert). Branches have more pedestrian, relatively smooth gray bark with white lenticels, as do the twigs. Flowers may be staminate (male), pistillate (female), or perfect (both), all on the same tree. Flowers are about 1/4″ across and bloom before the leaves open, often high in the tree (thus, I have no pictures yet). All flowers are wind-pollinated, yellowish-green with 4-6 spreading sepals joined at their bases; there are no petals. Male flowers have 4-5 stamens with green or yellow-brown anthers; female flowers have a green ovary with a large two-part, densely fuzzy style like an umbrella beneath the ovary. Perfect flowers have both.
