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Gumbo-limbo
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Bursera simaruba
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Landscape Uses:
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An excellent accent or specimen tree in moist to dry soils. It can be used as a street tree and in commercial and residential landscapes. A good shade tree in the hot summer months.
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Ecological Restoration Notes:
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One of the most common and important canopy trees in tropical hammocks.
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| Availability: |
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Widely cultivated. |
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| Description: |
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Medium to large tree with a rounded and usually broad spreading crown, moderately dense to open. Trunk thick, sometimes short, 1-3 feet in diameter. Bark thick and resinous; almost always with a thin, red peeling outer layer which varies in color from tree to tree. Leaves compound, 6-8 inches long; leaflets thin, smooth, becoming mottled with age. Semi-deciduous, losing its leaves immediately before leaf turnover and during extended periods of drought. |
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| Height: |
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Typically 30-50 feet in height; to 64 feet in South Florida. Can be as broad as tall or broader. |
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| Growth Rate: |
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Fast to moderate. |
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| Range: |
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Monroe County Keys north, mostly along the coast, to Brevard, Pinellas and Hillsbrough counties; West Indies, Mexico, Central America and northern South America. It is common on the east coast of South Florida, but less so in the interior and on the west coast. |
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| Habitats: |
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Hammocks. |
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| Soils: |
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Moist, well-drained sandy or limestone soils, with humusy top layer. |
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| Nutritional Requirements: |
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Moderate; can grow in nutrient poor soils, but needs some organic content to thrive.
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| Salt Water Tolerance: |
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Low; does not tolerate long-term flooding by salt or brackish water. |
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| Salt Wind Tolerance: |
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High; can tolerate moderate amounts of salt wind without injury. |
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| Drought Tolerance: |
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High; does not require any supplemental water once established. |
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| Light Requirements: |
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Full sun to light shade. |
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| Flower Color: |
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Greenish. |
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| Flower Characteristics: |
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Inconspicuous. Unisexual or perfect, with flowers of both sexes on the same tree. |
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| Flowering Season: |
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All year; peak winter-spring. |
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| Fruit: |
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Greenish-brown to red-purple fleshy capsule, separating into three sections at maturity, exposing one or two reddish seeds. |
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| Wildlife and Ecology: |
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Provides moderate amounts of food and cover for wildlife. Larval host plant for dingy purplewing (Eunica monima) butterflies. Kingbirds and other flycatchers eat the fruits. |
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| Comments: |
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Gumbo-limbo is one of our fastest growing and most versitile native trees. It has attractive reddish flaking bark, thus one of its common names "tourist tree." In high winds, such as from hurricanes, the trunks usually will not blow over, but the tree will lose some of its limbs and will refoliate quickly. Calusa Indians and others used the sticky bark resin to trap songbirds for food or trade. |
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© Roger L. Hammer
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© Melissa E. Abdo
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© George D. Gann
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© Shirley Denton
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© Shirley Denton
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Gann, G.D., M.E. Abdo, J.W. Gann, G.D. Gann, Sr., S.W. Woodmansee, K.A. Bradley, E. Verdon , and K.N. Hines. 2005. Natives For Your Neighborhood. The Institute for Regional Conservation, Miami.
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