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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Juglans cinerea | Butternut
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Juglans cinerea | Butternut
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Butternut is not an important lumber species. The wood is soft and suitable only for a few uses such as interior finishing, furniture, cabinet work, and small household woodenware [14]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Butternut fruit provides food for squirrels and other rodents [4,30]. PALATABILITY : Butternut leaves are palatable to white-tailed deer [30]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : NO-ENTRY COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Butternut has been recommended for planting on surface mined areas in the Northeast [6]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Several cultivars have been selected for nut size and for ease of cracking and extracting kernels. Nuts are especially popular in New England for making maple-butternut candy [24]. An iodinelike yellow dye can be extracted from the fruit husks and bark, and the root bark provides a laxative [14]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Within its optimum range and on good sites, butternut is usually considered a desirable component of forest stands. It has been classified as a "less desirable tree" in southern Appalachian coves [1,13,19]. The most serious disease of butternut is butternut decline or butternut canker. The causal organism of this disease is the fungus Sirococcus clavigignenti-juglandocearum. Symptoms include dying branches and stems. Spores develop on these dying branches and are spread by rainwater to tree stems. Stem cankers develop 1 to 3 years after branches die. Trees top-killed by stem-girdling cankers do not resprout [24]. This disease is reported to have almost eliminated butternut from North and South Carolina [2,18,25].

Related categories for Species: Juglans cinerea | Butternut

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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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