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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Maclura pomifera | Osage-Orange
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Maclura pomifera | Osage-Orange
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Osage-orange is a small, native, deciduous tree that averages 30 feet (9 m) in height. It has a short trunk and rounded crown. Shade-killed lower branches remain on the tree for years, forming a dense thicket. Branches growing in full sun have sharp, stout thorns 0.5 to 1 inch (1.3-2.5 cm) long. Osage-orange has a large, round multiple fruit composed of many fleshy calyces, each containing one seed. Osage-orange generally has a well-developed taproot; a tree in Oklahoma had roots more than 27 feet (8.2 m) deep. On shallow soils, roots spread laterally [4,7,34]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Phanerophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Osage-orange reproduces vegetatively and by seed. It is dioecious. Female trees begin producing seeds at age 10 but are most productive from age 25 to 65. Good seed crops are produced nearly every year. Seeds are disseminated by animals, gravity, and water. Seeds have a slight dormancy which is overcome by soaking in water for 2 days or stratifying in sand or peat for 30 days. Seed germination requires exposed mineral soil and full light. At 7 years of age, osage-orange is about 8 feet (2.4 m) tall with a crown spread of about 6 feet (1.8 m) [2,4,40]. Seed collection, cleaning, storage, and planting techniques are described [2,34]. Osage-orange sprouts vigorously from the stump [4,34]. Godfrey [7] suggested that it also sprouts from the roots. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Osage-orange grows best in areas that receive 25 to 40 inches (640-1,020 mm) precipitation a year but tolerates a minimum of 15 inches (380 mm). It is sensitive to cold and succumbs to winter-kill in the northern Great Plains [4,34]. Osage-orange grows on a variety of soils but does best on rich, moist, well-drained bottomlands. It occurs on alkaline soils, shallow soils overlaying limestone, clayey soils, and sandy soils [4,26,35]. It can occur on bottomlands which are seasonally flooded [4]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : The shade tolerance of osage-orange is not well defined. It has been listed as intermediate in tolerance [32] and intolerant [4]. Osage-orange grows in the subcanopy of bottomland forests [4,16], but it also invades overgrazed pastures and other open, disturbed sites with eroding soil. Osage-orange regenerates naturally on sunny sites but grows when planted in dense hedges [4]. Osage-orange in remnant bottomland hardwood forests is negatively associated with fragment size. In other words, the smaller the area of remnant forest, the more likely that osage-orange will occur there. Rudis [23] suggested that fragmentation may promote and accelerate the establishment of pioneer species and species adapted to disturbance. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Osage-orange generally flowers from April to June and the fruit ripens from September to October [2,4]. It flowers in mid-May in Kansas and Nebraska [28].

Related categories for Species: Maclura pomifera | Osage-Orange

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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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