American hazelnut (Corylus americana) catkins. Top row: three views of female catkins with the pink styles protruding. Bottom row: cluster of male catkins (left); close-up of male florets, each nestled under a bract (center); and a female catkin and part of a male catkin for scale (right).
American hazelnut flowers. The male inflorescence is a cylindrical catkin that appears in the fall on the most recent year’s twigs and then overwinters; in the spring, the catkin elongates (to 2-4″ long) and the male flowers (consisting of two tiny bracts and four stamens) open to release their pollen. The female inflorescence looks like a small bud protected by bracts that is located at the branch tip or in leaf axils; it contains several pistillate flowers seen only as red styles/stigmas protruding from the tip of the “bud.”
American hazelnut (Corylus americana). Top row: unripe (left) and nearly ripe (right) nuts and husks from lateral and frontal views. Bottom: typical leaves of American hazelnut.
American hazelnut leaves are alternate, up to 2.5-6″ long and 1.25-4.5″ across, roughly ovate, tapering to a sharp tip, with doubly serrate margins (i.e., serrations on serrations). The upper leaf surface is dark green and hairless while the lower leaf surface is paler and has stiff, short hairs, especially along the veins. Petioles are 1/4-3/4″ long, covered with both soft white hairs and dark, stiffer, glandular hairs. The fruit is a hard-shelled nut about 1/2″ across surrounded by a husk twice the size of the nut that looks like two appressed leaves, initially green, irregular, and jagged at the free end. As the nut matures, the bracts of the husk turn brown and separate at the tip; a mature nut is an orange-tinged brown. (If you’re lucky enough to find one, that is; they are quickly snapped up by squirrels, chipmunks, and a wide variety of birds. I’m told they are good eating.)
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