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- Ostrya virginiana (American Hop-hornbeam, Eastern Hop Hornbeam, Hop . . .
Eastern hop-hornbeam, is a slender deciduous tree in the Betulaceae (birch) family The common name is derived from the hardness of its wood and the hop-like fruit
- Ostrya virginiana - Wikipedia
Ostrya virginiana (American hophornbeam) is a small deciduous understory tree growing to 18 m (59 ft) tall and 20–50 centimetres (8–20 in) trunk diameter
- Ostrya virginiana - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden
Ostrya virginiana, commonly called American hop hornbeam, is a deciduous, Missouri native tree which usually occurs in dry soils on rocky slopes, upland woods and bluffs throughout the State
- Hop Hornbeam Plant Guide - USDA
The tree is monoecious (bearing flowers of both sexes on the same tree) The bloom time range is from mid spring to late spring and the tree has dark green foliage throughout the season that turns lemon yellow, yellowish brown, or red in the fall
- Eastern Hop Hornbeam - Grow Native!
Smaller deciduous tree that bears distincitive scaly fruiting structures in summer that look like beer hops and are an important food source for gamebirds Fruits are preceded by spring catkins, also utilized by wildlife
- Ostrya virginiana (American Hop Hornbeam) - Gardenia
Long-lived (150 years), Ostrya virginiana (American Hop Hornbeam) is a slow-growing, small to medium-sized deciduous tree of pyramidal habit in youth, developing an oval to rounded crown over time
- Hop-hornbeam | Description, Tree, Bark, Uses, Facts | Britannica
Hop-hornbeam, genus of about seven species of ornamental trees of the birch family (Betulaceae) native to Eurasia and North America Their common name derives from their fruit clusters that resemble true hops Learn more about the physical characteristics and major species of hop-hornbeams
- Ostrya virginiana - Edge Of The Woods Native Plant Nursery, LLC
The American hop-hornbeam provides unique habitat for a variety of other organisms because of its niche as an understory tree Understory trees and shrubs are an important part of forest ecology
- Ostrya virginiana (hop-hornbeam): Go Botany
Hop hornbeam gets its name from its fruits, which are enclosed in scales that loosely resemble the hops used in making beer (Humulus lupulus) This small, short-lived tree is common in the understorey of rich, moist woods
- Ostrya virginiana ( [Eastern] Hop-hornbeam, Ironwood)
Despite being one of the hardest of native woods, Hop-hornbeam is undesirable in commercial forests It provides interest as an ornamental though, with fluted trunk, exfoliating bark, and drooping clusters of sac- like pods that resemble the fruit of hops, hence its common name
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