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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Juglans californica | Southern California Walnut
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Juglans californica | Southern California Walnut
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : NO-ENTRY IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Southern California walnut forests and woodlands provide favorable habitat for a number of vertebrates and invertebrates. A 2-year survey in a southern California walnut woodland in the San Jose Hills found 29 species of diurnal birds [25]. Many rodents, including California ground squirrels and western gray squirrels, eat the nuts [11,25]. The nuts are rarely eaten by deer [25]. PALATABILITY : NO-ENTRY NUTRITIONAL VALUE : NO-ENTRY COVER VALUE : Larger southern California walnut trees provide excellent cover for deer, nesting birds, and rodents [25]. Raptors such as owls use the upper reaches of trees as roosts and nesting places. California ground squirrels dig burrows at the bases of old trees [25]. VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Southern California walnut has been successfully planted for erosion control on road slopes with deep soil at elevations below 3,500 feet (1,066 m). Best growth is achieved in partial shade [11]. In Los Angeles County, southern California walnut was planted in brush wattles during construction of a road fill. Trees reached heights of 12 feet (3.7 m) in 10 years [11]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Humans eat the nuts of southern California walnut, but the nuts are not grown commercially [25]. Chumash Indians ate the walnuts and used the nutshells for dice. They used the bark for making baskets [31]. Southern California walnut is suitable for ornamental landscaping and is widely planted in urban forestry projects [11,13]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Southern California walnut communities are in decline [5,10]. Threats include urban and rural development, overgrazing, and increased recreational use of walnut woodlands [14,25]. In Aliso Creek, Chino Hills State Park, cattle grazing initiated dry conditions, which were worsened by a 5-year drought. The resulting very dry environment hindered survival of walnut seedlings [14]. Grazing has been the principal economic activity in California walnut forests and woodlands for 200 years. The species composition of the southern California walnut woodland understory in the Puente and San Jose hills is attributed to overgrazing by cattle [25]. Pathogens: Southern California walnut is highly susceptible to crown (Phytophthora spp.) rots. Walnuts planted in soil infested with P. citricola and flooded for 48 hours biweekly showed reduced growth and high rates of mortality [17]. In the San Jose Hills, southern California walnut develop heart rot between 20 to 30 years of age. Portions of the trunk and older limbs subsequently become infested with termites and wood-boring beetles. Older multistemmed trees often have some stems that are healthy, some with heart rot, and others that are dead [25].

Related categories for Species: Juglans californica | Southern California Walnut

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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