Sugarberry; hackberry/Celtis laevigata

Yellow-poplar
Liriodendron tulipifera L.

Bark thin and dark green on young trees, becoming ash-gray and conspicuously furrowed and ridged with age. Branches spreading to ascending, often drooping on large open-grown trees. Twigs smooth, about 5 mm in diameter, encircled by stipule scars, red-brown. Buds (terminal) grayish green, turning red in winter, flat about 10 to 16 mm long, scales valvate. Leaves alternate, deciduous, simple; dark green above, turning yellow in fall; 6 to 20 cm long and as wide as long; petioles 5 to 20 cm long, often longer than the blades on low branches. Flowers perfect, tulip-shaped, about 4 to 6 cm long, greenish-yellow with orange to reddish markings at base of petals, color intensifies with age. Fruit an aggregate cone, 5 to 8 cm long, gradually shattering into one-seeded, winged samaras.

Yellow-poplar/Liriodendron tulipifera

Sweetbay
Magnolia virginiana L.

Bark dark gray, usually smooth, thin, in shady areas often encrusted with mosses, liverworts, and lichens. Branches stout, spreading to ascending. Twigs about 5 to 7 mm in diameter, encircled by stipule scars, green. Buds (terminal), silvery gray, pubescent, 15 mm long; smaller lateral buds often subtended by persistent petiole base. Leaves alternate, evergreen in South, deciduous in northern part of range, simple; elliptic to oblong, 10 to 15 cm long, 4 to 6 cm wide; margin entire, dark green above, silvery pubescent below. Flowers perfect, white, sweet-scented, 5 to 8 cm in diameter, appearing May to September. Fruit an aggregate of follicles which open and shed red seeds, irregular in shape, ovoid to ellipsoid, smooth, about 5 cm long.