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Pterocarya fraxinifolia

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Kemper Code:  A896

Common Name: Caucasian wingnut
Zone: 5 to 8
Plant Type: Tree
Family: Juglandaceae
Missouri Native: No
Native Range: Eastern Turkey, northern Iran, Caucasus
Height: 30 to 60 feet
Spread: 30 to 60 feet
Bloom Time: May - June  
Bloom Color: Green
Sun: Full sun
Water: Medium
Maintenance: Medium


Plant Culture and Characteristics

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  Uses:       Wildlife:   Flowers:   Leaves:   Fruit:
Hedge Suitable as annual Attracts birds Has showy flowers Leaves colorful Has showy fruit
Shade tree Culinary herb Attracts Has fragrant flowers Leaves fragrant Fruit edible
Street tree Vegetable   hummingbirds Flowers not showy Good fall color   Other:
Flowering tree Water garden plant Attracts Good cut flower Evergreen Winter interest
Gr. cover (<1') Will naturalize   butterflies Good dried flower     Thorns or spines

General Culture:

Easily grown in average, medium, well-drained soils in full sun. Prefers consistently moist soils, but tolerates drought. Tolerates hard, compacted soils. Develops an extensive root system. Freely suckers.

Noteworthy Characteristics:

Native from the Caucasus to northern Iran, Caucasian wingnut gets its interesting name from its fruit. After spring flowering, small green winged nutlets develop in the female catkins in early summer, forming pendulous strings to 20” long. Nutlets mature to brown in late summer to early fall, often persisting on the tree into winter. This is a deciduous tree in the walnut family that typically grows 30-60’ (less frequently to 90’) tall with a rounded, broad-spreading habit. Compound, odd-pinnate leaves grow to 18” long. Each leaf contains 7 to 27, ovate to oblong-lanceolate, sharply-toothed, glossy dark green leaflets (2-5” long). Undistinguished yellow-green fall color. Non-showy, monoecious light green flowers appear in pendulous catkins in late spring (May-June). Female catkins to 20” long. Male catkins to 5” long. Genus name comes from ptero (winged) and carya (hickory). Specific epithet is in reference to the similarity of the leaf to that of some ashes (fraxinus being the ash genus and folia meaning leaf).

Problems:

No serious insect or disease problems.

Uses:

Needs a large space. Best for parks or large commercial plantings. Suckering habit may temper use in residential lawns.

© Missouri Botanical Garden, 2001-2010


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