Eastern Redbud
Eastern Redbud
Cercis canadensis
Fabaceae (Legume Family)
▲ ▼ mature, flowering trees
▲ ▼ flowers, even emerging from older wood on branches and tree trunks
▲ ▼ flowers
▲ mature tree in summer
▲ leaves
▲ fruit
▲ fall color
▼ 'Forest Pansy' cultivar of Eastern Redbud
▼ White-flowered variety of Eastern Redbud
Location on campus: 'Forest Pansy' on east lawn of Carrington Hall; others in lawn area south of Plaster Student Union, south of Ellis Hall, and many other locations on campus
Cercis canadensis: Eastern Redbud
- leaves simple, deciduous, alternate, cordate with entire margins and palmate veins; 3-5" long and wide; new leaves reddish purple (especially on 'Forest Pansy' cultivar) then dark green and shiny above; often with good, clear yellow fall color
- stems slender, glabrous, dark red-brown, often zig-zag; pith has reddish streaks on older twigs
- bark is black or dark brown with reddish inner bark showing through on older trees and bark becoming somewhat scaly
- grows 20-30' tall and wide, often with multiple trunks or low branching; usually a rounded or flat-topped outline
- flowers bright pinkish-purple in bud in early to mid-spring, buds actually more colorful than flowers which are slightly lighter in color, appearing before the leaves; flowers in clusters at nodes, often all along the older branches and trunk, too; fruit is a brownish-purple pod
- prefers full sun to medium shade, and moist, well-drained soils; avoid too wet and too dry
- medium to fast growth rate
- native to Missouri
- Other redbuds:
- Cercis canadensis var. texensis: Texas Redbud
- smaller growing than eastern redbud with glossier, thicker-textured leaves and stouter branches; flowers more reddish than species
- Cercis chinensis: Chinese Redbud
- smaller than eastern redbud and flowers more of a fluorescent pink-purple
- Cercis occidentalis: Western Redbud
- smaller than eastern redbud with notch in tip of heart-shaped leaf and pink to magenta flowers
- Cercis canadensis var. texensis: Texas Redbud