| Main |

White Mulberry: Tree of the Week

MulberryThe white mulberry -- Morus alba

Mulberries come in white, red and black, and are loosely named after the color of their buds and blackberry-like fruit. The red one (M. rubra) is an eastern U.S. native, the black (M. nigra) comes from Western Asia, and the white one or silkworm mulberry is native to eastern and central China. Gen. James Edward Oglethorpe in 1733 imported the tree to Fort Federica in Georgia to start a silk production industry in this country, but that proved too labor intensive.

The deciduous white mulberry tree grows fast when young to an ultimately 30-foot to 50-foot dense, irregular roundhead. Bark is rough, light gray, with distinctive vertical furrows. Branches grow so fast on young trees that they need to be cut back to create a good tree shape. Branch wood is weak. Leaves are up to 6 inches long, toothed, rough above and smooth underneath; they frequently vary in shape, from oval to lobed. Tiny inconspicuous flowers are clustered on small catkins. The easily bruised inch-long white fruit is less tasty than that of the red and black mulberries; fruit causes notorious stains. Numerous surface roots make the tree difficult to garden under. The white mulberry tree is subject to sooty canker and dieback. It tolerates heat, many different soils and coastal conditions. It likes full sun and regular water, but will take some drought. The tree easily hybridizes with other mulberries and many varieties are available, including weeping forms and contorted leaf specimens.

Mulberry fruit is enjoyed worldwide, especially in Asia. Wood, bark and leaves are used in commerce and for medicines and animal food. The Romans painted the trunks of their army elephants red with the juice to make them look fiercer. The soft leaves of M. alba have been used to feed silkworms for over 5,000 years; so long that Bombyx mori, the moth whose pupae provide 1,000 to 3,000 feet of silk each, has gone extinct in the wild. Seeds make the female, fruit-producing, white mulberry tree quite invasive in many parts of the country; fruitless (male) versions are not, but produce highly allergenic pollen.

--Pieter Severynen

Thoughts? Comments?

Photo: Pieter Severynen

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c630a53ef010536175dc4970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference White Mulberry: Tree of the Week:

Comments

Weak branches sounds like a tree not to be around during a Santa Ana wind.

It seems this tree is even more versatile than our Renaissance men.

Once again, we realize the insignificance of man.

Please use native California trees whenever possible. I've grown up around mulberry trees, and I do like them. However, European settlers have decimated native plant stock over the last century.
Do your part to help revive the native plant base, a base which has had thousands of years to adapt to the California climate.
Thanks....Happy T-Day

Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In






Real Estate   FIND A HOME
CITY, NEIGHBORHOOD, OR ZIP
PROPERTY TYPE
BEDS
BATHS
PRICE RANGE
To go

All LA Times Blogs

All The Rage
American Idol Tracker
Angels Unplugged
Babylon & Beyond
Big Picture
Booster Shots
California Consumer
Comments Blog
Company Town
Culture Monster
Daily Dish
Daily Mirror
Daily Travel & Deal Blog
Dish Rag
Dodger Thoughts
Fabulous Forum
Gold Derby
Greenspace
Hero Complex
Homicide Report
Jacket Copy
L.A. at Home
L.A. Land
L.A. Now
L.A. Unleashed
La Plaza
Lakers
Money & Co.
Movable Buffet
Opinion L.A.
Outposts
Pop & Hiss
Readers' Representative Journal
Show Tracker
Technology
Ticket to Vancouver
Top of the Ticket
Up to Speed
Varsity Times Insider