Buttonballs, ready to drop
On a recent Saturday morning, my son and I spent two hours parked in a long line of stalled traffic on Interstate 65, just north of Elizabethtown, KY. An accident had occurred, and we had to wait until the road was cleared.
It was an absolutely gorgeous spring day, and our stopping place happened to be along a picturesque stretch of roadway. On our left, many dogwood and redbud trees were blooming on an east-facing hillside. On our right, a tangle of small trees and bushes were growing on the side of a ravine. Towering above them all was a young sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), seen in both the photo at left and the photo below.
Look how many of last year's fruits are still clinging to the top of that scyamore. This is typical of the tree -- in tree-speak, it's said that the sycamore fruits "persist" over winter.
The prickly seedballs break apart slowly, and the seeds gradually fall from the tree in late winter and spring. When there is wind or even a bit of breeze, the seeds drift along, using their "hair" as a parachute to keep them aloft.
The seed release is also perfectly timed for the seeds to be dispersed by spring floods. As the waters recede, seeds left in the mud are in the ideal spot to sprout and grow.
If you want to plant a sycamore tree, look for a seedling in the spring. You can recognize them by their large leaves. They are easy to dig up and transplant when they are small.
A sycamore seed that takes root in a friendly site can grow up to 10 feet in its first year. That's simply amazing -- from a seed to a 10-foot tree in 12 months.
Sycamore likes any damp location. It is most often seen in low-lying areas near streams, ponds, and lakes, but it can also establish itself in upland situations where the soil stays damp most of the time. The sycamore growing on the side of the ravine is a good example of the upland situations that sycamores can handle. In that site, it probably gets a good bit of runoff water from the road everytime it rains.
2 comments -- please add yours:
We have sycamores growing all over our damp stream beds here. In fact Connecticut's largest tree is a huge gnarly old sycamore. The seed ball picture at the end of your post looks like spiky sweet gum, not feathery sycamore balls.
Laurie, I took down the other photo this morning because I agreed with you that it looked like a sweet gum ball. (I had found the image on Flikr, and it's not uncommon for trees to be mislabeled there.)
When I looked for a replacement image this evening, I found quite a few examples of spiky sycamore balls, and also some smoother looking ones. The image I chose is from a reliable source, and it shows sycamore leaves surrounding spiky fruit.
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