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black cherry (Prunus serotina) observed in Wildwood Dr SE, Huntsville, AL, US

iNaturalist: pam83498

Summary

iNaturalist

Why it matters This matters because black cherry is a native tree that produces fruit eaten by dozens of bird species and supports hundreds of moth and butterfly caterpillars — spotting one in your neighborhood means local wildlife has a valuable food source nearby.

Someone in Huntsville, Alabama spotted and photographed a black cherry tree growing along a residential street, and enough people on iNaturalist agreed with the identification to make it 'research-grade.' Black cherry is a native North American tree that grows wild in forests and along roadsides, producing small dark berries in late summer. It's an important tree for wildlife and has a long history of use in folk medicine and woodworking.

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A black cherry tree (Prunus serotina) was documented in a residential area of Huntsville, Alabama, earning 'research-grade' status on the community science platform iNaturalist. This confirms the species' presence in the urban landscape of northern Alabama.

Key Findings

1

A research-grade observation of black cherry (Prunus serotina) was recorded at Wildwood Dr SE, Huntsville, AL — confirming verified presence in an urban residential setting.

2

The observation achieved 'research-grade' status on iNaturalist, meaning it was confirmed by multiple community identifiers and is suitable for use in biodiversity databases.

3

The sighting is located in northern Alabama, within the native range of black cherry, which spans most of eastern North America.

description

Abstract Preview

Research-grade observation of black cherry in Wildwood Dr SE, Huntsville, AL, US.

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Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — Black Cherry urban-ecology, citizen-science, native-species +1 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

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