Associated Forest Cover
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Sourwood is an understory to midcanopy associate of the following
forest cover types (Society of American Foresters) (6):
40 Post Oak-Blackjack Oak
44 Chestnut Oak
51 White Pine-Chestnut Oak
52 White Oak-Black Oak-Northern Red Oak
53 White Oak
75 Shortleaf Pine
76 Shortleaf Pine-Oak
78 Virginia Pine-Oak
79 Virginia Pine
81 Loblolly Pine
82 Loblolly Pine-Hardwood
110 Black Oak
Other associates, in addition to the cover type species,
are sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua); yellow-poplar
(Liriodendron tulipifera); scarlet and southern red oak
(Q. falcata); red and sugar maple (Acer rubrum and
A. saccharum); shagbark, bitternut, pignut, and mockernut
hickory (Carya ovata, C. cordiformis, C. glabra, and C.
tomentosa); white ash (Fraxinus americana); American
beech (Fagus grandifolia); eastern hemlock (Tsuga
canadensis); flowering dogwood (Cornus florida); sassafras
(Sassafras albidum); American hornbeam (Carpinus
caroliniana); eastern hophornbeam (Ostrya virginiana);
and redbud (Cercis canadensis).
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Climate
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Annual precipitation within the range of sourwood varies from 1020
mm (40 in) in the North to 2030 mm (80 in) in the central
Appalachians. Warm season precipitation ranges from 530 mm (21
in) in the North to 910 mm. (36 in) on the gulf coast and in the
Appalachians, and annual snowfall varies from none along the gulf
coast to 152 cm (60 in) in the Appalachians. The length of the
growing season fluctuates from 150 days in the mountains of
southern Pennsylvania to 300 days in northern Florida.
Temperature extremes vary from -29° C (-20° F) to 42°
C (107° F) within the range of sourwood.
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Damaging Agents
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Several insects attack sour wood but
normally do no serious harm (1). The dog. wood-twig borer, Oberea
tripunctata, and the twig girdler, Oncideres cingulata,
attack the twigs; the fall webworm, Hyphantria cunea (7),
and the hickory horned devil (the larva of the regal moth), Citheronia
regalis, attack the foliage.
There are no known reports of serious diseases that affect
sourwood.
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Flowering and Fruiting
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Sourwood is among the latest of
the flowering shrubs and trees to bloom, The white, bell-shaped
perfect flowers appear from late June to August in copious masses
on one-sided racemes clustered in an open particle. The flowers
are insect pollinated and are an important honey source in some
areas (14).
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Genetics
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No studies on the genetic characteristics of sourwood have been
reported.
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Growth and Yield
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The maximum size for sourwood is 24 in
(80 ft) in height and 61 cm (24 in) in diameter. It is typically
much smaller, reaching 6 to 15 in (20 to 50 ft) in height and 20
to 30 cm (8 to 1 in) in diameter (11).
Sourwood usually remains in the forest understory from seedling to
maturity. It occasionally enters the overstory in Piedmont
lowland pine stands, but on upland sites it attains the upper
canopy only if some disturbance removes the overtopping
vegetation (10)
Sourwood develops a slender trunk and small crown in dense stands.
In more open situations it forms a short, often leaning trunk
dividing into several stout, ascending limbs. Growth is slow in
established stands, but the initial growth of sprout in cutover
areas is rapid enough to hinder establishment of more desirable
species (7,12). Per-acre volume estimates are not available for
this specie because it usually grows in mixture with other
species rather than in pure stands.
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Reaction to Competition
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Sourwood is classed as tolerant
of shade and can grow and reproduce in the understory of climax
(oak-hickory) forest (3,10,11). Its response to release is not
definitely known but is thought to be poor.
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Rooting Habit
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No information is currently available on
the rooting habit of sourwood.
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Seed Production and Dissemination
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The fruit is a capsule
6 to 13 min (0.25 to 0.5 in) in length. It ripens in September
and October, and the tiny seeds are dispersed gradually
throughout the winter by the dehiscing capsule. The number of
seeds in clean lots range from 4 080 000 to 12 125 000 seeds per
kilogram (1,850,000 to 5,500,000/lb) (14).
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Seedling Development
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Seedbed requirements are not known
for natural regeneration. In the Piedmont, however, sourwood
seedlings and saplings are found in all stages of succession from
young pine stands to the oak-hickory climax (10). This indicates
that seed germination and establishment may occur on litter and
under partially shaded conditions.
Techniques have been described for sourwood seed collection,
storage, and germination (2,5,14). Acid sandy peat is recommended
as a seedbed for sourwood. Germination is epigeal.
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Soils and Topography
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In the central Appalachians sourwood is most abundant on subxeric
open slopes and ridges occupied by chestnut oak (Quercus
prinus), white oak (Q. alba), scarlet oak (Q.
coccinea), and Virginia pine (Pinus virginiana). It
appears less frequently on more mesic sites such as coves and
sheltered slopes (17). Throughout this area sourwood is found up
to 1520 m (5,000 ft) but rarely to 1710 m (5,600 ft) (13).
Sourwood grows throughout the Piedmont uplands. It is also found
along Piedmont streams on well-drained lowland areas not subject
to ordinary flooding (10). Where it enters the Coastal Plain it
is found on the gently rolling areas of the upper portion; toward
the coast it is restricted to old dunes and well-drained slopes
and ridges above streams and swamp borders.
Like most of the Ericaceae, sourwood generally does not grow on
soils of limestone origin (8,11) but is most commonly found
growing on soils in the orders Ultisols, Inceptisols, and
Entisols.
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Special Uses
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Sourwood is occasionally used as an ornamental because of its
brilliant fall color and midsummer flowers (7). It is of little
value as a timber species the wood is heavy and is used locally
for handles and fuel and in mixture with other species for pulp
(8). Sourwood is important as a source of honey in some areas and
sourwood honey is marketed locally.
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Vegetative Reproduction
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Sourwood sprouts prolifically and
persistently from the stump and often must be treated with
herbicides to release more desirable species in second growth and
in cutover areas (7,9,12,15). Sourwood is difficult to propagate
from cuttings. A single report found softwood cuttings (short
side shoots), made with a heel and taken in late July with a 90
ppm IBA soak, rooted 80 percent when placed in a sand:peat (equal
volumes) mix under mist (5). No reports were found of
propagation by grafting.
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Distribution
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Sourwood is found from southwest Pennsylvania to southern Ohio,
and southern Indiana, south to southeastern Louisiana and the
coastal region of Mississippi, Alabama, and northwest Florida;
west to western Kentucky and Tennessee, and to the Delta in
Mississippi; and east to the Atlantic coast from southern
Virginia to central North Carolina, and to the edge of the
Coastal Plain in South Carolina and Georgia. The main range lies
between latitude 30° and 40° N. and longitude 75°
and 92° W. Sourwood reaches its largest size on the western
slopes of the Great Smoky Mountains in Tennessee.
-The native range of sourwood.
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Brief Summary
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Ericaceae -- Heath family
Ronald P. Overton
Sourwood (Oxydendrum arboreum) grows in the upland forests
of the southeastern United States. Also known as sorrel-tree or
lily-of-the-valley-tree, its flowers are an important source of
honey in some areas but it is of little value as a timber
species. Sourwood sprouts often interfere with the establishment
of more desirable species in second-growth and cutover areas.
This mid-summer flowering tree is an attractive ornamental.
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