Description:
This tree is 60-80' tall at maturity and its trunk is 2-3½' across. In
relatively open areas, the densely branched crown is globoid to ovoid
in outline. Saplings that are growing in dense shade, however, have a
narrow open crown with only a few ascending branches. Trunk bark
is grayish brown or grayish black, becoming more rough and
irregularly furrowed with age. Branch bark is gray and more
smooth, while twigs are various shades of gray or brown, glabrous,
and covered with scattered white
lenticels (air pores). Non-woody young shoots are light green and
either short-pubescent or glabrous. Pairs of opposite leaves occur
along the twigs and young
shoots. Individual leaves are 4-5" long and similarly across; each leaf
has 3-5 palmate lobes and an orbicular outline. The leaf lobes have a
tendency to droop downward. The tips of these lobes
are pointed, while their sinuses are rounded; the sides of the terminal
lobe usually contract gradually into a terminal point without
intermediate teeth. The margin of each leaf is slightly to
moderately undulate; it has either no teeth or very few teeth.
When such teeth exist, they are large and dentate.
The upper leaf surface is dark green and glabrous, while the lower
surface is pale to medium green and sparsely to densely canescent or
short-pubescent. The slender petioles are 3-5" long,
light green to yellowish green, and either glabrous or short-pubescent.
Black Maple is either dioecious or monoecious, producing
separate male and female flowers on the same or different trees. Male
flowers are produced in drooping umbels or sparingly branched corymbs
about 2½-4" long. Individual male flowers are about 1/8" (3 mm.) long,
consisting of a yellowish green calyx with 5 teeth and a variable
number of exerted stamens (usually about 6-8). Female flowers are also
produced in drooping umbels or sparingly branched corymbs, but they are
shorter (about ¾-2" long). Individual female flowers are about 1/8" (3
mm.)
long, consisting of a yellowish green calyx with 5 teeth and a 2-celled
ovary with a divided style. Both male and female flowers can occur in
the same inflorescence. The long slender pedicels of both male and
female flowers are hairy. The flowers bloom during mid- to late
spring as the leaves emerge (which are yellowish green at this time of
year). Cross-pollination is achieved by the wind during a 1-2 week
period.
Fertile female flowers are replaced by paired samaras that become
mature during the fall. The paired samaras form a 45º to 90º angle with
each other. Individual samaras are about 1" long, consisting of a plump
one-seeded head with a membranous wing; they are
distributed by
the wind. The woody root system consists of much-branched lateral roots
that are relatively shallow. During the autumn, the deciduous leaves
usually become bright yellow; less often, they turn orange or red.
Cultivation:
The preference is full sun to light shade, moist to mesic
conditions that are well-drained, and soil containing loam, silt-loam,
or some mineral-rich glacial till. Similar to Sugar Maple,
the saplings of Black Maple are able to survive in moderately
dense shade,
although higher levels of light are preferred. Poor drainage with
standing water isn't tolerated for any substantial length of time.
Because Black Maple casts a heavy shade underneath its leaves, it can
kill turf-grass and other kinds of vegetation. This tree
can live up to 200 years.
Range
&
Habitat: The native Black Maple is occasional to locally
common in central and northern Illinois (see
Distribution
Map),
while in the southern section of the state it is uncommon or absent.
Black Maple is more abundant in the lower Midwest than elsewhere; it
becomes relatively more common than Sugar Maple toward the western
limit of its range (e.g., in Iowa), otherwise it is less
common. Habitats of Black Maple include rich mesic woodlands, moist
bottomland woodlands, and shaded riverbanks (above the flood
zone). Black Maple is more vulnerable than most trees to
wildfires.
Faunal
Associations:
The leaves, plant juices, wood, and other parts of maples (Acer spp.)
are sources of food to many insects. These species include the larvae
of
Xylotrechus aceris (Gall-making Maple Borer) and other long-horned beetles, larvae of
Corythylus columbianus (Columbian Timber Beetle) and other bark beetles,
Phyllobius oblongus (European Snout Weevil) and other weevils,
Periphyllus americanus (American Maple Aphid) and other aphids,
Eratoneura spp. (leafhoppers),
Pulvinaria innumeralis (Cottony Maple Scale) and other scale insects,
Phenacoccus acericola (Maple Mealybug), larvae of
Xiphydria spp. (wood wasps), larvae of
Dryocampa rubicunda (Rosy Maple Moth) and other moths; also a spider mite,
Oligonychus aceris (Maple Spider Mite). The
Insect Table
has a more complete list of these species. Other insects feed on the
sap of maple trees after the protective bark has been damaged. These
sap-feeding insects include honeybees, Andrenid bees, Braconid wasps,
sawflies, Syrphid flies, Tachinid flies, flesh flies (Sarcophagidae),
Calliphorid flies, Muscid flies, sap flies (Aulacigastridae), dung
flies, (Scathophagidae), skipper flies (Piophilidae), and various
forest butterflies, such as
Nymphalis antiopa (Mourning Cloak),
Polygonia comma (Eastern Comma),
Polygonia interrogationis (Question Mark), and
Limenitis arthemis astyanax (Red-spotted Purple); see Robertson (1929) and Wilhelm & Rericha (2017).
Vertebrate animals also use Black Maple and other maples
as a source of food and protective cover. Some upland gamebirds and
songbirds eat the seeds, buds, or sap of these trees (see
Bird Table).
Among mammal species, the wood and bark are eaten by the American
Beaver and North American Porcupine. The twigs and foliage of these
trees are eaten by the American Moose, Elk (where introduced), and
White-tailed Deer. The seeds are eaten by the Prairie Vole, Meadow
Vole, White-footed Mouse, Eastern Gray Squirrel, Fox Squirrel, American
Red Squirrel, and Eastern Chipmunk, while the Southern Flying Squirrel
feeds on the sap (Martin et al., 1951/1961; Schneider et al., 2006).
Because
of
heart rot, old maple trees provide dens for tree squirrels and such
cavity-nesting birds as the Black-Capped Chickadee, European Starling,
Northern Flicker, Red-bellied Woodpecker,
Pileated Woodpecker, and Screech Owl. The Rose-breasted Grosbeak,
Evening Grosbeak, American Goldfinch, Baltimore Oriole, American
Robin, Red-eyed Vireo, and other birds construct nests on
branches of maples that vary in size from small saplings to
mature trees (Martin et al., 1951/1961; DeGraaf, 2002). In addition to
birds, some species of bats use maples as roost trees and for maternity
colonies. This includes Lasiurus borealis (Eastern Red Bat), Myotis lucifugus (Little Brown Bat), Myotis septentrionalis (Northern Long-eared Bat), and Perimyotis subflavus (Tricolored Bat); see Mager & Nelson (2001), Bergeson (2012), Johnson et al. (2009), and Veilleux et al. (2003).
Photographic Location: The Arboretum of the University of
Illinois in Urbana, Illinois.
Comments: For
commercial purposes, Black Maple is not distinguished from Sugar
Maple: its sap is just as useful in making maple syrup, and its wood
has very similar properties that make it useful in the construction of
furniture and other wooden objects. Black Maple can be distinguished
from Sugar Maple as follows: 1) Its leaves have drooping lobes,
rather than the more even lobes of Sugar Maple, 2) the margins of its
leaves have fewer to no teeth, 3) its leaves typically have 3 tapering
lobes,
rather than 5 parallel-sided angular lobes, 4) its leaf undersides are
canescent or short-pubescent, rather than glabrous or nearly glabrous,
and 5) on older trees, its trunk bark tends to be more black and
furrowed. In Illinois, individual trees that display evidence of
hybridization between these two species are fairly common. For this
reason, Black Maple has been classified as a variety or subspecies of
Sugar Maple by some taxonomists, or
Acer saccharum nigrum.
It is also
possible to confuse Black Maple with the introduced
Acer platanoides
(Norway Maple), which is often cultivated as a street tree. Norway
Maple can be identified by the milky sap that exudes from the base of
a petiole after it has been broken off from a branch; in
contrast, the sap of
Black Maple is clear. Norway Maple also has paired samaras that are
more divergent (forming an angle that
exceeds 120º) and it has larger flowers in more erect clusters that
are insect-pollinated.