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Home / Plant Finder / Juglans
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Black walnut has separate male and female flowers on the same tree (often the same branch). The male florets occur on 3-6" long, dangling, green, cylindrical catkins that arise from the leaf axils of one-year-old branchlets; the florets are 1/8" across and are comprised of a short, tubular calyx with 2-6 lobes and 15-40 stamens with greenish-yellow or purplish anthers. The female florets occur in groups of 2-5 on short spikes that arise from the tips of the current year's new branchlets; these florets are also about 1/8" across but are comprised of a short, tubular calyx with four lobes, a stout, green ovary covered with sticky hairs, and a pair of stout, bushy styles with red-tinged stigmas. The female florets are wind pollinated; the trees are self-fertile if cross-pollination does not occur. Fertilized female florets develop into globoid nuts about 2.5" long and 2" across that initially retain the styles; the nuts are solitary or in pairs. The thick husk turns from green to yellowish-brown to black as the fruit matures. The nuts cannot germinate unless they are exposed to 90-120 days of cold winter temperatures.
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Juglans

Juglans nigra

black walnut [Blooms: May?-Jun]

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I want to acknowledge the work of a friend and colleague, Dr. Fred Donner. We both share a passion for the flowers in Jackson Park. Fred's website (jacksonparkwildflowers.org) inspired me to build my own website and database; use and enjoy them both.

I am also pleased to thank my ninja web gurus and coders, Lindsey Young and Stefanie Engstrom. This site would not exist without their herculean labors.

Copyright 2026 © Michael LaBarbera

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