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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Diospyros texana | Texas Persimmon
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Diospyros texana | Texas Persimmon
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Texas persimmon wood is black, hard, and heavy. It takes a high polish and is used for tools, engraving blocks, and art work [30,34,41]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Wildlife use Texas persimmon for food, shelter, and cover. Coyote, raccoon, ringtail, foxes, and other mammals and birds eat the fruit [1,14]. Spanish goats consume large amounts of Texas persimmon foliage [22]. White-tailed deer browse the foliage lightly [11,19]. In brushy habitats Texas persimmon and other woody species form a tall overlapping canopy which produces thermal, hiding, and escape cover for white-tailed deer [47]. PALATABILITY : Texas persimmon browse is of low preference to white-tailed deer [4]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : Dry-weight Texas persimmon browse averages 14 percent protein, 0.25 percent phosphorus, 1.55 percent potassium, 2.46 percent calcium, 0.64 percent magnesium, and 0.08 percent sodium [19]. The browse has medium food value for white-tailed deer [11]. COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Container-grown Texas persimmon was planted with other native species on a borrow pit reclamation site in central Texas. The exposed subsoil and sandstone was covered with 4 to 6 inches (10-15 cm) of topsoil before planting. Eighty percent of the woody transplants survived the first summer and winter [26]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Texas persimmon fruit is edible and used in puddings and custards. The fruit pulp produces an indelible black stain. Mexicans use it to dye animal hides [30,34,41]. Texas persimmon is used for landscaping [33]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Texas persimmon is one of many woody species that has contributed to brush problems on Texas rangeland. With overgrazing, drought, increased seed dispersal, and decreased fire frequency, woody species have expanded from lowlands onto uplands. Managers are concerned with the corresponding decrease in grass forage and are experimenting with methods for controlling brush [9]. Double chaining is an effective means of opening up dense stands of scrub oak (Quercus spp.)-juniper (Juniperus spp.) communities which contain Texas persimmon. In a study on the Edwards Plateau, brush canopy was 80 percent lower on treated than untreated brush stands 1 year after double chaining [32]. Mechanical brush removal followed by prescribed fire is the most effective brush control method (See FIRE MANAGEMENT) [8,9]. Texas persimmon is generally resistant to herbicides. Texas persimmon was only slightly susceptible to soil application of picloram pellets [23]. Canopy reductions of Texas persimmon after aerial application of picloram and 2,4,5,-T are described [6]. Spanish goats can be used to control brush. Optimum goat stocking densities and management are described [22]. Bryant and Kothmann [12] estimated Texas persimmon browse biomass using regression equations with crown volume and weight relationships.

Related categories for Species: Diospyros texana | Texas Persimmon

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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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