// SPECIES PROFILE · TREE · NATIVE
Adopted as the state tree of Oklahoma in 1937, the Eastern Redbud is the small understory tree that turns every wood-edge, fence-line and Cross Timbers ravine bright magenta in late March. A legume that flowers on bare branches before its leaves emerge — sometimes directly out of the trunk — Cercis canadensis is one of the first significant nectar sources of the Tulsa-region year for native bees, and a host plant for Henry's elfin butterfly. The Texas/Oklahoma subspecies texensis has glossier, leathery leaves and is what most local nurseries actually sell as "Oklahoma Redbud."

[ field key — bark · leaf · flower · pod · habit ]
Small, multi-stemmed tree or large shrub, typically 20–30 ft with a broad, often irregular crown. Trunk usually short and twisted; canopy spreads as wide as it is tall. Bark on young trees is smooth and reddish-brown; with age it becomes scaly and deeply fissured into thin, flaking plates, occasionally with maroon patches. Branchlets are slender, visibly zigzagged, dark brown to nearly black, dotted with pale lenticels.
Alternate, simple, distinctly heart-shaped, 7–12 cm long and about as wide, with a smooth (entire) margin and 5–7 prominent palmate veins from the base. Thin and papery on ssp. canadensis; glossier and more leathery on ssp. texensis (the "Oklahoma Redbud"). Emerge folded along the midrib, mature dark green above / paler beneath, and turn clear yellow in October.
Showy, magenta-pink, pea-like (papilionaceous) flowers, ~1.5 cm long, in dense clusters of 4–8 directly on bare twigs, branches and even the trunk — a phenomenon called cauliflory. Open before the leaves in early spring (late March in Tulsa, often several weeks before the canopy oaks leaf out). Pollinated by long-tongued bees including blueberry bees and carpenter bees; short-tongued bees can't reach the nectaries.
Flat, dry, brown legume pods 5–10 cm long, mature August–October and persist on the tree well into winter, a useful off-season ID feature. Each pod contains 6–12 hard, flat, elliptical chestnut-brown seeds about 6 mm long. Seeds have a dual dormancy (impermeable seed coat + chilling requirement) — this is why redbud seedlings appear in random, often surprising places.
Eastern Redbud is a frequent native understory tree across virtually all of NE Oklahoma — the Cross Timbers oak-hickory mosaic, the western edge of the Ozark Highlands, riparian gallery forests along the Arkansas, Verdigris and Caney rivers, and brushy fence rows and old pastures statewide. It tolerates the full range of regional soils: rocky chert & sandstone ridges, deep alluvial bottoms, even compacted suburban clay. It is naturally absent only from the most arid far western parts of the state.
What you usually see at Tulsa-area garden centers labeled "Oklahoma Redbud" is Cercis canadensis subsp. texensis, the Texas/Oklahoma subspecies native from central OK south through the Edwards Plateau. Its leaves are smaller, thicker, more heat-resistant, and a glossy dark green — ideally adapted to our summers. Cultivars selected from this subspecies ('Oklahoma', 'Texas White') are the most reliable performers in the region.
[ pollinators · larval hosts · seed predators · trophic role ]
Redbud is one of the first major nectar sources of the Tulsa spring, blooming in the gap between the earliest willows and the main flush of fruit-tree bloom. Specialist pollinators include the Habropoda laboriosa (Southeastern blueberry bee) and Xylocopa virginica (eastern carpenter bee), both of which are large enough to access the keeled flowers. Honeybees and short-tongued native bees visit but cannot reach the nectaries; they often steal nectar through side-slit flowers cut by carpenter bees.
Larval host plant for Henry's elfin butterfly (Callophrys henrici), the redbud leaffolder (Fascista cercerisella), red-humped caterpillar (Schizura concinna), fall webworm, the white flannel moth, American dagger moth, and Io moth. Late-season defoliation by webworms is cosmetic and rarely harms a healthy tree — do not spray.
Seeds are eaten by Northern bobwhite, mourning doves, and several finches and sparrows; the heavy persistent pod crop is a winter food source. Deer browse leaves and twigs lightly — redbud is fairly deer-resistant compared to most natives. Cavity-nesting birds use older trunks once heart-rot establishes.
Although in the legume family, Cercis canadensis has lost the genes required to form root nodules and does not fix nitrogen — a common misconception in permaculture literature. Its real ecological role is as an early-spring nectar pulse, a light-feeding understory tree that thrives in the gaps between bigger oaks and pecans, and a leaf-litter contributor that decomposes quickly into mild, near-neutral mulch.
[ planting · soil · water · propagation · pruning · pests ]
Plant in fall through early spring, while dormant. Redbuds resent transplanting once established because of a deep, sparse, brittle taproot, so install young (1–5 gallon) container or B&B stock and don't move them later. Choose a site with at least 4 hours of sun (more flowers in more sun, but afternoon shade extends bloom and prevents leaf-scorch on ssp. canadensis) and well-drained soil. Will tolerate compacted clay if drainage is adequate; will not tolerate standing water. pH range 6.0–8.0.
After 2 full growing seasons, mature redbuds are notably drought-tolerant in the Tulsa region, but they look much better and bloom more heavily with one deep soak during August–September dry spells. Avoid frequent shallow irrigation, which promotes shallow roots and worsens drought response.
Prune in late spring immediately after flowering, before the tree sets next year's flower buds on this season's new wood. Remove dead, crossing or rubbing branches; thin to a single leader if grown as a small tree, or maintain multi-stem form. Avoid heading cuts — redbud responds with weak watersprouts. Trees over ~30 years often develop heart-rot from old pruning wounds; keep pruning cuts small and clean.
| Cultivar | Subspecies | Distinguishing feature | Notes for Tulsa |
|---|---|---|---|
| 'Oklahoma' | texensis | Glossy dark-green leathery leaves, deep wine-red flowers | Most reliable cultivar for our heat & clay; OK State Fair selection. |
| 'Texas White' | texensis | Pure-white flowers, glossy leaves | Pairs with 'Oklahoma' for striking contrast plantings. |
| 'Forest Pansy' | canadensis | Burgundy-purple new foliage, fades green by mid-summer | Likes afternoon shade; leaf color holds longest in cooler years. |
| 'Rising Sun' | canadensis | Apricot-orange new growth aging to gold then green | Specimen tree; needs protection from hot western sun. |
| 'Ruby Falls' | canadensis | Weeping habit, purple foliage, pink flowers | Patio specimen; small (6–8 ft). |
| 'Hearts of Gold' | canadensis | Bright golden-yellow leaves all season | Needs afternoon shade or scorches by July in OK. |
| 'Lavender Twist' (Covey) | canadensis | Strongly weeping form, lavender-pink flowers | Small (~5–6 ft); full sun; striking winter silhouette. |
Pairs naturally with: serviceberry (Amelanchier arborea) for simultaneous bloom and fruit, chickasaw plum for thicket structure, fragrant sumac as a low groundcover guild, wild bergamot and purple coneflower in the herbaceous layer beneath, and any of the larger oaks or pecans as the upper canopy. Avoid planting directly under black walnut (juglone-sensitive).
Every part of an Eastern Redbud that flowers or fruits is edible, with caveats:
Photos courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributors under their respective licenses (linked under each image). Hero photo USDA NRCS PLANTS Database, public domain.