ClintonCanopy's Plant List: Shirley Jenkins Park

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American Sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua)
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Millers Fork
Shirley Jenkins Park
Lydia Bailey Children's Park
The American sweetgum (Liquidambar styriciflua) grows to a height of 60–75' and has a spread of 40–50' at maturity. It grows from 13 inches to 24 inches per year. Deep, glossy green star-shaped leaves mark the Sweetgum. The leaves turn yellow-purple-red in the fall and stay on the tree quite late in the season. Its shape is pyramidal, becoming more rounded with age. The Sweetgum tree is native to the southeastern United States and a member of a genus made up of only six species. The others are found only in Asia. The first historical reference to the tree comes from the author and soldier, Don Bernal Diaz del Castillo, who accompanied Cortez in 1519 and was a witness to ceremonies between Cortez and Montezuma, when both partook of a liquid amber extracted from a sweetgum tree. Once commercially popular for soaps, adhesives and pharmaceuticals, today its wood is valuable for fine furniture and interior finishing. Small mammals such as chipmunks, red squirrels and gray squirrels also enjoy the fruits and seeds. American sweetgum seeds are also eaten by eastern goldfinches, purple finches, sparrows, mourning doves, northern bobwhites and wild turkeys.

summer leaves

Overcup Oak (Quercus lyrata)
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Pine Street Park
Shirley Jenkins Park
Arbor Day Trees
Downtown
The Overcup oak, is so named because of the way the cup grows over the acorn. It is also known by a few other names - swamp post oak, swamp white oak, and water white oak because it can withstand flooding, poorly drained clay soil, and hot humid climate. It is also fairly drought-tolerant. These characteristics make the Overcup oak an important tree for urban environments. This versatile tree can grow 60-90 feet tall in good conditions. The trunk can reach 2.5-3 feet in diameter with a wide, spreading canopy with rich yellow-brown fall color. An Overcup oak can live up to 400 years, and over time, that canopy may spread 40-80 feet. (Arbor Day Collection)

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