Glossy
Buckthorn
Frangula alnus
Buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae)
Description:
This is usually a multistemmed shrub (less often a small tree) about
3-20' tall. The bark of older branches or trunks is gray and slightly
wrinkled or rough-textured. Young branches and twigs are brown with
abundant
white lenticels (air pores), while young shoots are light green, pale
yellowish brown, or red, terete (circular in cross-section), and
glabrous to
slightly short-pubescent. Deciduous alternate leaves occur along the
young shoots and twigs. These leaves are 1–3" long and ½–1½" across;
they are elliptic-oblong to ovate-oblong in shape, while their
margins are entire (toothless) and sometimes undulate (wavy
up-and-down). The leaves have narrowly rounded bases, while
their tips are acute. The upper leaf surface is medium to dark green,
hairless, and shiny, while the lower leaf surface is medium green and
hairless to slightly short-pubescent. Leaf venation is pinnate. Each
leaf has about 6-8 pairs of lateral veins that are parallel to each
other; they curve toward the leaf tips as they
approach the leaf margins. The petioles are light green to red and up
to ½" long. Either solitary or small umbels of 2-6 flowers (usually the
latter) develop from the axils of the leaves; the solitary flowers and
umbels of flowers are sessile.
Each flower is a little
less than ¼" across, consisting of 5 yellowish green to white sepals, 5
white petals, 5 stamens, and a pistil. The sepals have a petaloid
appearance and they are joined together at the base; their tips are
triangular in shape. The petals are shorter than the sepals and
individually divided
into 2 rounded lobes. The slender pedicels of the flowers are up to 8
mm. (1/3" long) and hairless. The blooming period occurs from early
summer to late
summer, lasting about 3 months. Both blooming flowers and drupes at
different stages of develop can occur on this woody plant at
the
same time. Cross-pollination of the flowers is necessary in order to
produce fruit. The drupes are about ¼" (6 mm.) across, globoid in
shape, and hairless. As they develop, the drupes change color from
green, to yellow, to red, and finally to black at maturity. The drupes
are either solitary or they occur in umbels of 2-3 (some flowers don't
develop into drupes). The interior of mature drupes is fleshy or juicy,
containing 1-3 hardened seeds (stones). The woody root system is
reddish,
shallow, and spreading. New clonal shoots can develop from the roots.
Cultivation: This shrub prefers full
to partial sun and wet to moist conditions. It can adapt to different
kinds of soil, including those that are silty, sandy, loamy, and peaty.
Soil pH can be acidic to slightly alkaline. This shrub is very
winter-hardy. It is potentially invasive (especially near the Great
Lakes) and its cultivation should be avoided.
Range &
Habitat: The non-native Glossy Buckthorn is
locally common to
occasional in northern Illinois, uncommon or rare in central Illinois,
and largely absent from the southern section of the state (see
Distribution
Map).
Glossy Buckthorn was introduced into North America
as an ornamental shrub, and to improve habitat for wildlife. It is
native to Europe, central Asia, and northern Africa. Habitats include
forested bogs, shrub bogs, fens, willow thickets, sedge meadows, moist
sandy savannas, riverbanks and borders of ponds, swamps, powerline
clearances in moist sandy areas, roadside ditches, and waste areas. In
other states, this shrub has been found in alder thickets and open
woodlands that are dominated by White Pine (Pinus strobus).
Glossy
Buckthorn is considered an invasive shrub in many areas of NE USA,
Midwestern USA, and SE Canada. It competes directly with such native
shrubs as Highbush Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum)
and Dwarf Birch
(Betula pumila); see Taft & Solecki (1990).
Faunal
Associations: The small flowers are visited by
bees, wasps, flies, and
beetles. Both nectar and pollen are available as floral rewards.
Information about what kind of insects feed on Glossy
Buckthorn in North America is rather limited. The leaves are eaten by
the caterpillars of an oligolectic moth, Metrea ostreonalis
(Oystershell Metrea). There are also records of the caterpillars of two
polyphagous moths, Triphosa haesitata (Tissue Moth)
and Hyalophora
cecropia (Cecropia Moth), feeding on the leaves of buckthorns
(Frangula
spp., Rhamnus spp.); see Natural History
Museum (2015) and Wagner
(2005). The caterpillars of a butterfly, Callophrys henrici (Henry's
Elfin), feed on the leaves of Glossy Buckthorn in Ontario, Canada
(Catling et al., 1998). Some vertebrate animals also use Glossy
Buckthorn as a source of food. The fruit is eaten by such songbirds as
the American Robin, Cedar Waxwing, Bohemian Waxwing, Rose-breasted
Grosbeak, and European Starling (Gucker, 2008). DeGraaf (2002) lists
additional birds that feed on the fruits of buckthorns. Among
mammals, the seeds are carried to caches by small rodents, where they
are stored and eaten; large mammalian herbivores (probably deer) browse
on the twigs and foliage (Knapp et al., 2008). Many of these vertebrate
animals spread the seeds to new locations.
Photographic Location:
A sandy willow thicket at Illinois Beach State Park in NE Illinois.
Comments:
While
its flowers are not very showy, Glossy Buckthorn has attractive foliage
and fruits. This non-native shrub is unusual in having blooming flowers
and maturing fruits on its branches at the same time. Other buckthorns
(Rhamnus spp., Frangula spp.) in
Illinois, including the non-native
Common Buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica),
produce blooming flowers first
and maturing fruits afterwards. Compared to Glossy Buckthorn, Common
Buckthorn differs by having toothed leaves and its leaves have fewer
lateral veins (typically 2-3 pairs). The native Lance-leaved Buckthorn (Rhamnus
lanceolata)
is a smaller shrub (up to 6' tall) that also has toothed leaves and the
tips of its leaves tend to be more tapered and acute. Another native
species, Bog Buckthorn (Rhamnus alnifolia), is a
dwarf shrub up to 3' tall that has toothed leaves. All of these Rhamnus
spp.,
with the exception of Bog Buckthorn, differ from Glossy Buckthorn by
having flowers with only 4 sepals and 4 petals. The most similar
species, Carolina Buckthorn (Frangula caroliniana),
has been
found only in southern Illinois. Unlike Glossy Buckthorn, Carolina
Buckthorn has pubescent pedicels and its leaves tend to be slightly
longer (sometimes up to 5" in length). In addition, the umbels of
flowers of Carolina Buckthorn are sometimes non-sessile; they can occur
on peduncles or short lateral shoots up to ¼" (6 mm.) in length. A
scientific
synonym of Glossy Buckthorn is Rhamnus frangula.