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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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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Maclura pomifera | Osage-Orange
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Osage-orange wood is hard, durable, and resistant to decay. It is primarily used for fence posts [4,24]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Osage-orange provides shelter and cover for wildlife. Small mammals and birds use the thorny tree for cover. The bitter-tasting, fleshy fruit is generally not eaten, but some animals including squirrel, fox, red crossbill, and northern bobwhite occasionally eat the seeds [4,14,24,34]. Seedlings and sprouts are browsed occasionally [4]. Downy woodpeckers use osage-orange as forage sites [10]. PALATABILITY : Osage-orange fruit and browse are generally not palatable [4,33,34]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : The fleshy fruit of osage-orange is more than 80 percent digestible [25]. COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Osage-orange is used for soil stabilization and strip mine reclamation [3,4,32]. It is adapted to most surface mine conditions but does better in less acidic, well-drained mine soils. It has a lower soil pH limit of 4.5. Osage-orange had a 33 percent survival rate 30 years after planting on mine soils in Illinois and Indiana, and a 39 percent survival rate after 30 years on mine soils in Ohio [32]. Osage-orange is sensitive to soil compaction [4]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Early settlers of the Great Plains used osage-orange for hedgerows. The diffuse, thorny branches form impenetrable hedges which were used to fence in livestock [24]. Osage-orange wood extractives are used for food processing, pesticide manufacturing, and dye making. The Osage Indians used the wood for dye and bows. The strong-smelling fruit repels cockroaches [24]. Osage-orange is planted as an ornamental. There is an unusual thornless male form which is clonally propagated [19]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Osage-orange is planted in shelterbelts and hedgerows of the Great Plains. It is planted alone or in a row adjacent to a row of evergreens or taller hardwoods [34]. Osage-orange hedges are maintained as fences by pruning [24]. While a favorite of the past, osage-orange hedgerows are now replaced with species that provide more benefit to wildlife [14]. Osage-orange is recommended for planting on deep, moist, permeable soils and medium to shallow upland silty-clayey loams, sandy loams, and loamy sands. It is not recommended for sandhills or wet, poorly drained soils [21]. Osage-orange hedges are often clearcut for posts. Winter cuttings produce the most vigorous stump sprouts which regenerate the hedge [27]. Three to five years after clearcutting, the new sprout stands should be thinned to 240 stems per 100 meters. The sprouts are susceptible to fire and grazing [4]. Osage-orange is generally resistant to disease and insects; the only serious affliction is cotton root rot (Phymatotrichum omnivorum) [4,22]. Eastern mistletoe (Phoradendron serotinum) occasionally parasitizes osage-orange [8]. Hamel [9] describes herbicide application rates, methods, and seasons for osage-orange control. Triclopyr or picloram, applied with a chainsaw girdling treatment, are effective against osage-orange [17]. Launchbaugh and Owensby [12] describe preferred osage-orange herbicide control methods for Kansas.

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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