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Red Mulberry
Morus rubra L.

Red Mulberry: Full Size

Mature Size: 30 to 60 feet in height and 1 to 2 feet in diameter.

Form: Short trunk and dense, spreading crown.

Habitat: Floodplains and low, moist slopes.

Leaves

Red Mulberry: Leaves

Alternate, simple, 3 to 5 inches long, rough above and downy beneath, with toothed edges; leaf shape may be oval, mitten-shaped, or with 3 or more lobes.

Flowers

Males and females are usually on separate trees; tiny, pale green, clustered into 1 to 2 inch hanging catkins (males) or 1 inch catkins (females), both appearing in late spring with the leaves.

Fruit

Red Mulberry: Fruit

1 to 1¼ inch fleshy cluster resembling a blackberry, red when immature, turning deep purple when ripe in mid-summer; sweet, juicy and edible.

Bark

Red Mulberry: Bark

Dark brown tinged with red, but often orange on young trees; scaly with long, irregular ridges.

Twigs

Slender, zigzag, green changing to red-brown, sometimes fuzzy; buds covered with brown-edged overlapping scales; leaf scars shield-shaped and somewhat sunken; silvery-white hairs present when twig is broken.

Values and Uses

The dark brown wood is light and soft, not strong, but quite durable. It was traditionally used for fencing, barrels, interior finish and agricultural tools. The berry is a favorite food for squirrels, opossums, raccoons, turkeys and many songbirds.

Did You Know?

A related species, white mulberry (Morus alba) is the main food source for silkworm caterpillars. White mulberry was imported from China in the 1700s, in hopes of establishing a silk industry in the southern United States. Although silk production here was never successful, white mulberry is now naturalized throughout the South.

Last modified: Monday, 10-Mar-2008 20:21:14 UTC