Health Benefits

Traditional uses and benefits of Sourwood

Oxydendrum arboreum, commonly called sourwood or sorrel tree, is a deciduous understory tree belonging to Ericaceae (Heath family). The plant is native to southwest Pennsylvania to southern Ohio, and southern Indiana, south to southeastern Louisiana and the coastal region of Mississippi, Alabama, and northwest Florida; west to western Kentucky and Tennessee, and to the Delta in Mississippi; and east to the Atlantic coast from southern Virginia to central North Carolina, and to the edge of the Coastal Plain in South Carolina and Georgia. It is perhaps most commonly found on rocky wooded slopes in the Appalachian Mountains, often growing in combination with other heath family members (e.g., azaleas and rhododendrons) that share the same acidic soil preferences. Some of the popular common names of the plant are Sourwood, Lily-of-the-valley tree, Sorrel tree, common sourwood, titi, titi tree, arrowwood, elk tree, sorrel gum, sour gum and tree Andromeda.

Genus name Oxydendrum comes from the Greek words oxys meaning acid and dendron meaning a tree. The foliage is bitter. Specific epithet arboreum comes from the Latin word arboreus (of a tree). The sour tree name comes from the acidic and bitter tasting foliage, which is caused by oxalic acid in the leaf tissues. Sourwood is often used as an ornamental for its vivid autumn color. Leaf color ranges from vivid red through salmon, pink, and yellow. Sourwood flowers are attractive to bees, and Sourwood honey is much prized. Sourwood grows best in well-draining acidic soils. Best flowering and fall color occur on plants growing in full sun. Sourwood is often available from nurseries. It can also be grown from seed planted in the autumn, or from cuttings of semi-hardened twigs taken in early summer.

Sourwood Facts

Sourwood Quick Facts
Name: Sourwood
Scientific Name: Oxydendrum arboreum
Origin Southwest Pennsylvania to southern Ohio, and southern Indiana, south to southeastern Louisiana and the coastal region of Mississippi, Alabama, and northwest Florida
Colors Yellowish to greenish-grey colored
Shapes Small, hard, dry, oval to egg-shaped, pointed capsules.
Taste Pleasant acidic taste
Health benefits Good for asthma, dysentery, diarrhea, kidney and bladder ailments, indigestion, menstrual bleeding, nausea, stomach ache, nervousness, and fever.
Name Sourwood
Scientific Name Oxydendrum arboreum
Native Southwest Pennsylvania to southern Ohio, and southern Indiana, south to southeastern Louisiana and the coastal region of Mississippi, Alabama, and northwest Florida; west to western Kentucky and Tennessee, and to the Delta in Mississippi; and east to the Atlantic coast from southern Virginia to central North Carolina, and to the edge of the Coastal Plain in South Carolina and Georgia
Common Names Sourwood, Lily-of-the-valley tree, Sorrel tree, common sourwood, titi, titi tree, arrowwood, elk tree, sorrel gum, sour gum, and tree Andromeda
Name in Other Languages Afrikaans: Sourwood
Albanian: Sourwood
Amharic: Irit’ibi inich’eti (እርጥብ እንጨት), komit’at’ē (ኮምጣጤ)
Arabic: Qashida (قشدة), sourwood
Armenian: T’t’u p’ayt (թթու փայտ), sourwood              
Azerbaijani: Turşu, sourwood
Basque: Sourwood
Belarusian: Sourwood
Bengali: Sourwood
Bosnian: Sourwood
Bulgarian: Sourwood
Burmese: Saitpain (သစ်ပင်)
Catalan: Sourwood
Cebuano: Sourwood
Chichewa: Sourwood
Chinese: Suān mù (酸木), sourwood, Suānmó shù (酸模樹)
Corsican: Legnu acidu
Croatian: Sourwood, Kiselo drvo
Czech: Kyselé dřevo, Surové dřevo, kysloun stromový
Danish: Sourwood
Dutch: Zuurhout, Sourwood
English: Sourwood, Lily-of-the-valley tree, Sorrel tree, common sourwood, titi, titi tree, arrowwood, elk tree, sorrel gum, sour gum, and tree andromeda
Esperanto: Acida lingo, sourwood
Estonian: Hapupuu, Sourwood
Filipino: Kulay-gatas, sourwood
Finnish: Sourwood, Muikopuu
French: Bois aigre, Raisin, andromède en arbre, arbre à l’oseille
Frisian: Soerstof
Galician: Sourwood
Georgian: Arazhani (არაჟანი), sourwood
German: Sauerholz, Sauerbaum, gemeiner Sauerbaum
Greek: Xylo (ξυλο), Xyleía (Ξυλεία)
Gujarati: Khāṭō lākaḍuṁ (ખાટો લાકડું), sourwood
Haitian Creole: Sourwood
Hausa: Garin katako, sourwood
Hawaiian: Lāʻau ʻawa
Hebrew: עץ חמוצה
Hindi: Sourwood
Hmong: Sourwood
Hungarian: Sourwood
Icelandic: Súrviður, Sourwood
Igbo: Sourwood
Indonesian: Sourwood, Kayu mas
Irish: Sourwood
Italian: Sourwood, albero ossalida, ossidendro arboreo
Japanese: Sawāuddo (サワーウッド), Shiuuddo (シウウッド), Suibanoki (スイバノキ)
Javanese: Kayu manis,  sourwood
Kannada: Huḷi mara (ಹುಳಿ ಮರ), sourwood
Kazakh: Qışqıl ağaş (қышқыл ағаш), sourwood
Khmer: Sourwood
Kinyarwanda: Sourwood
Korean: Sawo udeu (사워 우드), sin namu (신 나무)
Kurdish: Dara gûzê, dara tirş
Kyrgyz: каймак
Lao: Mak u (ໝາກ ອຶ),  sourwood
Latin: Sourwood
Latvian: Skābs koks, Sourwood
Lithuanian: Rūgštynės, Sourwood
Luxembourgish: Sauerholz
Macedonian: Kiselo drvo (кисело дрво), sourwood
Malagasy: Sourwood
Malay: Sourwood
Malayalam: Puḷipp ( പുളിപ്പ്), seā’urveā’od  (സൊഉര്വൊഒദ്)
Maltese: Injam ħelu, sourwood
Maori: Sourwood
Marathi: Āmbaṭavuḍa (आंबटवुड), sourwood
Mongolian: Isgelen mod (исгэлэн мод), sourwood
Myanmar (Burmese): Sourwood
Nepali: Sā ucaravuḍa (साउचरवुड), sourwood
Norwegian: Sourwood, Syretre
Odia: ଖଟା
Oriya: ଖଟା          
Pashto: لرګي  
Persian: Sourwood, اکسیدندرام
Polish: Kwaśne drzewo, sourwood, Kwaśnodrzew amerykański
Portuguese: Sourwood, Ovelha
Punjabi: Khaṭā lakaṛa (ਖੱਟਾ ਲੱਕੜ)
Romanian: Sourwood
Russian: Sourwood, Oksidendrum (Оксидендрум)
Samoan: Sourwood
Scots Gaelic: Sourwood
Serbian: Kiselo drvo (кисело дрво), sourvood (соурвоод)
Sesotho: Sourwood
Shona: Huni
Sindhi: داڻا         
Sinhala: æm̆bul lī (ඇඹුල් ලී), sourwood
Slovak: Sourwood
Slovenian: Kislo drva, sourwood
Somali: Sourwood
Spanish: Madera agria, Significado de sourwood, Kislikavec
Sudanese: Buah kayu pajar, sourwood
Swahili: Sourwood
Swedish: Sourwood
Tajik: Cormagz (чормагз), sourwood
Tamil: Puḷippu (புளிப்பு), sourwood
Tatar: кычыткан
Telugu: Sourwood
Thai: Sourwood
Turkish: Sourwood
Turkmen: Turşu
Ukrainian: Kyslytsi (кислиці), sourwood [sourwood]
Urdu: ھٹی لکڑی, sourwood
Uyghur: Sourwood
Uzbek: Nordon daraxt, sourwood
Vietnamese: Gỗ chua, sourwood
Welsh: Sourwood
Xhosa: Umthi omuncu
Yiddish: sourvood (סאָורוואָאָד)
Yoruba: Sourwood
Zulu: I-sourwood, sourwood
Plant Growth Habit Deciduous, small to medium-sized tree
Growing Climates Woodlands on free-draining or gravelly acidic soils; on cliff faces, along streams and around the margins of swamps and pine heaths, dry rocky woods, in pine or mixed pine and hardwood stands, in hardwood forests, and well drained woodlands of bluffs
Soil Moist, organically rich, well-drained soils; acidic, clay, loam, sand
Plant Size 10–20 m (33–66 ft.) tall with a trunk up to 50 cm (20 in) diameter. Occasionally on extremely productive sites, this species can reach heights in excess of 30 meters and 60 cm diameter
Root Sourwood roots are developed from a taproot sensing aerated soil depth and throwing out lateral roots behind its tip
Branchlets Branchlets at first are light yellow green, but later turn reddish brown
Bark Grayish brown, very thick with deep furrows and scaly ridges; often the ridges are broken into recognizable rectangles
Wood Wood is reddish brown, with paler sapwood; it is heavy, hard, and close-grained, and will take a high polish. Its specific gravity is 0.7458, with a density of 46.48 lb/cu ft.
Leaf Leaves are simple, thin, deciduous, and oblong-elliptical to oblong-lanceolate in shape. Leaf tip has a long point and the leaf base is wedge-shaped. Leaf margin can be a combination of several forms. Leaf tip has a long point and the leaf base is wedge-shaped. Leaf margin can be a combination of several forms
Flowering season June to August
Flower Individual sourwood flowers are small, regular, symmetrically shaped, fragrant, and showy. Individual flowers are bell or urn shaped with white to creamy-white colored petals. The flowers are waxy, slightly minutely hairy, and small about 0.25 to 0.33 inches long.
Fruit Shape & Size Small, hard, dry, oval to egg-shaped, 5-celled, yellowish to greenish-grey colored, pointed capsules about 0.35 inches long containing 25–100 narrowly oblong seeds, ripening in autumn and persisting through winter
Fruit Color Yellowish to greenish-grey colored
Propagation By seeds or by softwood cuttings
Lifespan Up to 200 years if planted at the right site
Taste Pleasant acidic taste
Plant Parts Used Leaves
Season September through October

Plant Description

Sourwood is a deciduous, small to medium-sized tree that normally grows about 10–20 m (33–66 ft.) tall with a trunk up to 50 cm (20 in) diameter with a straight, slender trunk and narrow oblong crown. Occasionally on extremely productive sites, this species can reach heights in excess of 30 meters and 60 cm diameter. The plant is found growing in woodlands on free-draining or gravelly acidic soils, on cliff faces, along streams and around the margins of swamps and pine heaths, dry rocky woods, in pine or mixed pine and hardwood stands, in hardwood forests, and well drained woodlands of bluffs. The plant prefers moist, organically rich, well-drained soils. It also does best in acidic, clay, loam sand.

Roots

Sourwood roots are developed from a taproot sensing aerated soil depth and throwing out lateral roots behind its tip. This juvenile taproot is soon compartmentalized away from the tree and a mature fibrous root system is sustained. Sourwood has a shallow, high oxygen demanding root system which is not effective with too much interference from other species. Sourwood does not have any significant allopathic impact of its own. Sourwood will sprout effectively from its stump and root crown area.

Bark

Sourwood periderm is unusual among other hardwood tree species. The periderm is shiny grey to reddish-grey-brown on the surface with a reddish-orange inner layer. Periderm is deeply creased with long furrows and short horizontal dividing fissures which yield a rectangular blocky texture (like persimmon). Mature periderm is usually 0.66 to 1.0 inch in thickness.

Twigs

Sourwood twigs are stiff but slender, with a crooked or zigzag growth pattern. First year twigs are reddish to bronze colored, while older twigs range from reddish-green to reddish-orange to yellowish-brown in color. Twigs are smooth with conspicuous orange or red tinted, oblong shaped, lenticels.

Leaf scars are shield or triangular shaped and raised above the twig surface, with no associated stipular scars. Each leaf scar has a single C or V shaped bundle scar. The pith is solid, white colored, round in cross-section, and has no cross walls. Sourwood is notorious as being extremely difficult to propagate from twig cuttings.

Buds

Sourwood has no true terminal buds. Lateral bud becomes the new shoot leader for each growth flush and each new season. Lateral bud dominance gives twigs a crooked or zig-zag appearance. Lateral buds are sparsely and minutely hairy on bud scale margins and across the inner surface. Lateral buds are small, round or globular shaped, 0.08 to 0.13 inches in diameter, and unstalked. They appear to be partially imbedded in the periderm. Buds have 3-6 dark red, rounded scales terminating in a minute point at the bud top.

Leaves

Sourwood leaves are arranged along the twig in an alternate or spiral form. Leaves are simple, thin, deciduous, and oblong-elliptical to oblong-lanceolate in shape. Leaf tip has a long point and the leaf base is wedge-shaped. Leaf margin can be a combination of several forms. The most common margin is finely toothed or finely toothed except near the base. The least common leaf margin is a smooth, untoothed edge. Leaves are sour or bitter to taste. Leaves are 4.5 – 7.5 inches long on average and 1.2 – 3.0 inches wide on average.

The upper leaf surface is shiny, smooth, with a bright yellowish green to a darker green color, if in full sun, and a yellowish-orange tinted green color under shaded conditions. The leaf underside has a bright yellow mid-rib which has stiff minute hairs (trichomes). These trichomes can occasionally also appear on the upper leaf surface over the midrib. The lower leaf surface is paler green than the upper leaf surface. Leaves are connected to the twig with a 0.66 to 1.0 inch long petiole covered with a few stiff small trichomes. Leaves begin senescence early and generate a bright crimson or purplish-burgundy color in early fall while most other trees are still fully green.

Leaf arrangement Alternate
Leaf type Simple
Leaf margin Serrulate, entire, undulate
Leaf shape Oblong, lanceolate
Leaf venation Pinnate, brachidodrome
Leaf type and persistence Deciduous
Leaf blade length 4 to 8 inches
Leaf color Green
Fall color Red, orange
Fall characteristic Showy

 

Flowers

Sourwood trees are co-sexual (both male and female parts within each flower) with very noticeable and unique flowering structures. Individual sourwood flowers are small, regular, symmetrically shaped, fragrant, and showy. Individual flowers are bell or urn shaped with white to creamy-white colored petals. The flowers are waxy, slightly minutely hairy, and small about 0.25 to 0.33 inches long. A number of people compare individual sourwood flowers with the bulb perennial herbaceous flower called “lily of the valley” in form. Petals form five short lobes. Petals are held at their base by sepals which all together form five lobes and stay attached as the fruits ripen. Each flower contains ten stamens.

Flowers are generated after the leaves have already expanded. Numerous small flowers are held on one side of long sweeping or drooping sprays, each spray (raceme) being 5.5 – 10 inches long. The end of upper branches can produce 3-8 terminal racemes of flowers around the entire crown. Lower branches may generate fewer racemes. Light colored, flower racemes and their sweeping, elongated growth form, provide a lacy or soft textured appearance to the tree. Flowers are insect pollinated, primarily by bees, using rich nectar and fragrant smell for attraction. Each flower produces small amounts of pollen. Flowering occurs near mid-growing season, roughly late May to mid-July across the range. Flowers dangle downward until about ten days after fertilization when the individual flower stems begin to curl upward. The individual flower stems have fine minute trichomes. Flowering normally takes place in between June to August.

Flower color White/cream/gray
Flower characteristics Showy

 

Fruit

Fertile flowers are followed by small, hard, dry, oval to egg-shaped, yellowish to greenish-grey colored, pointed capsules which can split along five lines on the sides. The capsule is covered with minute hairs and the fruit stands erect on a curved, short, fruit stalk which earlier in the growing season had dangled downward to enable flower fertilization. Capsule is about 0.35 inches long. The capsule ripens by the first of October and remains attached to the tree long after splitting in late fall to release many tiny seeds. Seeds are continually released into winter. Fruit collection should be in late fall. Do not collect any fruit which hangs down. Rub the fruits together to split the capsule and release the seeds.

Fruit shape Oval
Fruit length Less than .5 inch
Fruit covering Dry or hard
Fruit color Brown
Fruit characteristics Does not attract wildlife; not showy; fruit/leaves not a litter problem

 

Seeds

Each capsule holds many minute, oblong shaped, pale brown to orange-yellow colored, wingless, 0.125 inch long seeds. Each seed is surrounded by a loose, thin, papery seed coat which looks like two small wings or points. Seeds freshly out of the capsule in late fall have no dormancy requirement and no pretreatment is needed for germination except for having at least four hours of light on the seedbed. Seed production occurs every year with large variability in seed numbers. Expect 2-5 million seeds per pound.

Traditional uses and benefits of Sourwood

Culinary Uses

Other Facts

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=23690#null

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxon/taxonomydetail?id=311632

https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Oxydendrum+arboreum

https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?kempercode=a887

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/OXDAR

https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/tree/oxyarb/all.html

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/tro-12300622

https://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/misc/ag_654/volume_2/oxydendrum/arboreum.htm

https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/ST429

https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/38178

https://plants.usda.gov/home/plantProfile?symbol=OXAR

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