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ANGIOSPERM FAMILIES 02 JUGLANDACEAE THE WALNUT FAMILY
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JUGLANDACEAE THE WALNUT FAMILY Trees or large shrubs. Forests of the North Temperate zone and to some extent in the tropics of both hemispheres. 9 genera and about 60 species worldwide. Two genera and 17 species in N America. – Juglans – Carya
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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE FAMILY HABIT: trees and large shrubs. LEAVES: deciduous, alternate, pinnately compound, estipulate. FRUIT: a hard nut surrounded by woody or semifleshy husk; husk dehiscent or indehiscent; seed with large convoluted cotyledons.
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DETAILS OF THE FLOWER Anemophilous. Unisexual, monoecious. Calyx lobed, 3-5 lobes; subtended by a bract and two bracteoles. Petals absent. Staminate flowers in catkins. Pistillate flowers solitary or few in stalks.
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JUGLANS FEMALE FLOWERS JUGLAND NIGRA L.JUGLANS CINEREA L.
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JUGLANS MALE FLOWERS JUGLANS NIGRA L.JUGANS CINEREA L.
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GENUS JUGLANS LEAVES: pinnate, odd or even pinna number; leaflets 9-23, sessile or nearly so, oblong- lanceolate, apex acute or acuminate, uneven base, margin finely serrate, apical leaflet often absent; petiole and rachis stout and finely pubescent. FLOWER: plant monoecious; imperfect; male flowers in catkins; female flower solitary or in short spikes, with plumose stigmas.
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GENUS JUGLANS cont. FRUIT: a nut with semifleshy indehiscent husk; nut thick-walled, corrugated; seed sweet often oily. TWIGS: light brown, stout, pubescent or glabrous; pith chambered; terminal bud with few scales. LEAF SCARS: 3-lobed, with three U-shaped bundle scars.
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JUGLANS NIGRA L. Black walnut
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JUGLANS CINEREA L. Butternut or White walnut
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FRUIT COMPARISON JUGLANS NIGRA L.JUGLANS CINEREA L.
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GENUS JUGLANS Range in North America Juglans nigra L.Juglans cinerea L.
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GENUS CARYA Nutt. HICKORIES Trees Present range: Eastern North America, southern Canada and Mexico; Caucasus to Japan. Extinct range: Europe, N Africa, Asia, and N America. 18 extant species; several extinct species.
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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE GENUS LEAVES: pinnately compound; 3 -17 sessile or nearly so leaflets, apical leaflet usually the largest; leaflets ovate to obovate, apex acute or acuminate, uneven bases, margin finely serrate, pubescent; petiole and rachis pubescent or glabrous, stout. FLOWERS: plant monoecious, flowers imperfect; staminate flowers in 3-branched catkins, 3 to 7 stamens, 2-3 lobed calyx;
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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE GENUS FLOWERS cont.: pistillate flowers on 2 to 10 terminal spikes, ovary 1-celled with two stigmas, subtended by a bract and three bracteoles. FRUIT: ovoid, pyriform or globose nut encased in a woody husk that may split in four sutures; seed with a thick or thin shell. TWIG: stout or slender, dark brown, gray or orange brown; terminal bud large
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CHARACTERISTICS OF THE GENUS SCARS: 3-lobed or deltoid; many bundle scars in 3 U-shaped clusters. PITH: homogeneous NORTH AMERICAN HICKORIES are grouped in two sections: – Section Carya, true hickories – Section Apocarya, pecan hickories
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INFRAGENERIC CLASSIFICATION SECTION Carya, true hickories – Leaflets 5 – 7, terminal leaflet the largest. – Fruit unwinged, with sutures occasionally ribbed. – Bud scales imbricate; 6 – 9 thin scales SECTION Apocarya, pecan hickories – Leaflets 7 – 13, leaflets similar. – Fruit broadly winged at the sutures. – Bud scales not overlapping; 4 – 6 fleshy scales.
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CARYA TOMENTOSA (Poir.) Nutt Mockernut hickory. LEAFFRUITS
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CARYA TOMENTOSA (Poir.) Nutt.
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CARYA GLABRA (Mill.) Sweet PIGNUT HICKORY LEAFFRUIT
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CARYA GLABRA (Mill.) Sweet PIGNUT HICKORY TWIGLEAF UNDERSIDE
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CARYA ILLINOIENSIS (Wangen.) K. Koch PECAN
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ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF THE JUGLANDACEAE The walnuts produce a valuable wood used in cabinetry. Hickories produce a very strong wood used for many purposes where strength is needed. Pecan is the most valuable nut in N America. The nuts of walnuts and hickories are an important source of food for wildlife. Important ornamental trees.
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