Cool. I was right that it's a mulberry. Thanks for all the details. I believe I 
measured a much larger one at Batsto last winter.
(Batsto State Historic Site, in Wharton State Forest)

--- On Mon, 5/18/09, Will Fell <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Will Fell <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Tree ID help #1
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, May 18, 2009, 5:16 AM



It's a paper mulberry and the reason it is fruitless is that it is a
male tree. Those are staminate flowers. The vast majority of paper
mulberrys are male for some reason.

On May 17, 10:11 pm, Barry Caselli <[email protected]> wrote:
> ENTS,
> I'm asking for help in ID'ing this tree. It's in our front yard. I'm not sure 
> if these trees are native here or not, but they do seem to be common.
> For years and years I've referred to this one as a fruitless mulberry tree. 
> But is it mulberry? It has never, ever had fruit on it, but it reminds me of 
> mulberry trees that I've seen.
>  
> And for those who don't know, or have forgotten, I live in the New Jersey 
> Pine Barrens, specifically in Atlantic County, just south of Wharton State 
> Forest (which now covers 122,000 acres).
>  
>


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