enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Carya laciniosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_laciniosa

    Carya laciniosa, the shellbark hickory, in the Juglandaceae or walnut family is also called kingnut, big, bottom, thick, or western shellbark, attesting to some of its characteristics. It is a slow-growing, long-lived tree, hard to transplant because of its long taproot, and subject to insect damage.

  3. Carya ovata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_ovata

    Carya ovata, the shagbark hickory, is a common hickory native to eastern North America, with two varieties. The trees can grow to quite a large size but are unreliable in their fruit output. The trees can grow to quite a large size but are unreliable in their fruit output.

  4. Hickory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hickory

    Hickory is a common name for trees composing the genus Carya, which includes 19 species accepted by Plants of the World Online. [3]Seven species are native to southeast Asia in China, Indochina, and northeastern India (), and twelve are native to North America.

  5. Rock Point Provincial Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_Point_Provincial_Park

    Habitats within the park include wetlands, forests and dunes. Trees include the uncommon Big Shellbark Hickory. Limestone shelves along the lake shore contain the fossils of marine animals from the Devonian period. The fossil beds also contain deposits of chert, a stone similar to flint which was worked to produce stone points. An archeological ...

  6. Carya myristiciformis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_myristiciformis

    Carya myristiciformis, the nutmeg hickory, a tree of the Juglandaceae or walnut family, also called swamp hickory or bitter water hickory, is found as small, possibly relict populations across the Southern United States and in northern Mexico on rich moist soils of higher bottom lands and stream banks. Little is known of the growth rate of ...

  7. Oak–hickory forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak–hickory_forest

    The current oak–hickory forest includes the former range of the oak–chestnut forest region, which encompassed the northeast portion of the current oak–hickory range. When the American chestnut population succumbed to invasive fungal blight in the early 20th century, those forests shifted to an oak and hickory dominated ecosystem.

  8. List of trees and shrubs by taxonomic family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trees_and_shrubs...

    water hickory Juglandaceae (walnut family) 401 Carya cordiformis: bitternut hickory Juglandaceae (walnut family) 402 Carya floridana: scrub hickory; Florida hickory Juglandaceae (walnut family) Carya glabra: pignut hickory Juglandaceae (walnut family) 403 Carya illinoinensis: pecan Juglandaceae (walnut family) Carya laciniosa: shellbark hickory

  9. Carya glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_glabra

    Tree with catkins and galls made by Phylloxera perniciosa. Carya glabra, the pignut hickory, is a common, but not abundant species of hickory in the oak-hickory forest association in the Eastern United States and Canada. Other common names are pignut, sweet pignut, coast pignut hickory, smoothbark hickory, swamp hickory, and broom hickory.