Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) flowers. Top: a pecan tree with numerous staminate (male) catkins dangling from the branches. Bottom right: closer view of the male catkin showing individual male florets. Bottom left: close-up of male florets, some of which show anthers. The three-lobed bractlets that shelters the anthers are clearly visible. Note: I was unable to find female florets or (later) nuts on this tree.
Pecan trees have separate male and female flowers on the same tree. The staminate (male) catkins droop from short spurs on the twigs; they typically develop in groups of three and are about 4-6″ long with numerous staminate florets along the catkin. Individual staminate florets have a three lobed bractlet arising from their base that shelter the 4-6 stamens that hang beneath it; the middle lobe is the longer of the three lobes. The pistillate (female) spikes develop at the tips of a subset of the twigs, each spike bearing 3-10 greenish, pistillate florets; the florets are 1/4″ long and 1/8″ across. Each pistillate floret contains a short, tubular calyx, four bractlets of unequal sizes, and a pistil with two feathery stigmas. Each bractlet has four erect to spreading, lance-shaped lobes. The pistillate florets are wind pollinated. Fertilized florets transform into 2-6 greenish fruits (nuts in a husk) in a cluster, each with four short wings; when mature, the ovoid fruits are about 2″ long and 1″ across, brown or black in color; the husks partially divide into four segments along the wings, releasing the nut. Pecan is typically a bottomland tree that lives in river valleys but can grow in any rich, moist, well-drained soil. The leaves of black walnut and pecan have a similar number of leaflets in their odd-pinnate leaves, but the fruits are completely different. According to the Arnold Arboretum at Harvard, pecan trees (Carya illinoinensis) can live for over 300 years. For some reason, Carya illinoinensis is the state tree of …… Texas.
Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) stems and leaves. Top left: several compound pecan leaves emerging from the tip of a branch. Male catkins are drooping down in the lower left corner of the image. Bottom: a single pecan compound leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf/leaflets in the image on the left and the underside of the leaf/leaflets of the same leaf in the image on the right. Top left: the trunk of a pecan tree showing the shallow, irregular furrows and flattened ridges of the bark.
Pecan (aka, hardy pecan) is an imposing native tree that grows to 70-150 feet tall with a trunk 2-6 feet across at maturity. (Pecan is the largest of the hickories.) Tree outline depends on habitat — in open areas, the crown is globoid and the trunk is shorter; in woodlands, the crown is narrower and the trunk is relatively narrower and more oval. The bark on the trunk of mature trees and on large branches is gray to gray-brown and rough textured with little relief — shallow, irregular furrows and flattened ridges. Small branches are gray and smooth; young twigs are brown and usually fuzzy from short hairs. The leaves are alternate and odd-pinnate compound with 9-17 leaflets. The leaflets range from 2-7″ long and 1/2-2.5″ wide, lance-shaped or a combination of lance- and oblong-shaped, curved to one side (except the apical leaflet), with asymmetric bases and elongated tips, and coarsely serrated along their margins. The petiolules (leaflet stalks) are 1/4″ long or less.
A pecan (Carya illinoinensis) tree (left image) in early June growing north of West Lagoon and east of Cornell Drive (in the background). The image on the right shows several pecan compound leaves and a number of staminate (male) catkins hanging from a branch.
Pecan (aka, hardy pecan) is an imposing native tree that grows to 70-150 feet tall with a trunk 2-6 feet across at maturity. (Pecan is the largest of the hickories.) Tree outline depends on habitat — in open areas, the crown is globoid and the trunk is shorter; in woodlands, the crown is narrower and the trunk is relatively narrower and more oval. The bark on the trunk of mature trees and on large branches is gray to gray-brown and rough textured with little relief — shallow, irregular furrows and flattened ridges. Small branches are gray and smooth; young twigs are brown and usually fuzzy from short hairs. The leaves are alternate and odd-pinnate compound with 9-17 leaflets. The leaflets range from 2-7″ long and 1/2-2.5″ wide, lance-shaped or a combination of lance- and oblong-shaped, curved to one side (except the apical leaflet), with asymmetric bases and elongated tips, and coarsely serrated along their margins. The petiolules (leaflet stalks) are 1/4″ long or less. Pecan trees have separate male and female flowers on the same tree. The staminate (male) catkins droop from short spurs on the twigs; they typically develop in groups of three and are about 4-6″ long with numerous staminate florets along the catkin. Individual staminate florets have a three lobed bractlet arising from their base that shelter the 4-6 stamens that hang beneath it; the middle lobe is the longer of the three lobes. The pistillate (female) spikes develop at the tips of a subset of the twigs, each spike bearing 3-10 greenish, pistillate florets; the florets are 1/4″ long and 1/8″ across. Each pistillate floret contains a short, tubular calyx, four bractlets of unequal sizes, and a pistil with two feathery stigmas. Each bractlet has four erect to spreading, lance-shaped lobes. The pistillate florets are wind pollinated. Fertilized florets transform into 2-6 greenish fruits (nuts in a husk) in a cluster, each with four short wings; when mature, the ovoid fruits are about 2″ long and 1″ across, brown or black in color; the husks partially divide into four segments along the wings, releasing the nut. Pecan is typically a bottomland tree that lives in river valleys but can grow in any rich, moist, well-drained soil. The leaves of black walnut and pecan have a similar number of leaflets in their odd-pinnate leaves, but the fruits are completely different. According to the Arnold Arboretum at Harvard, pecan trees (Carya illinoinensis) can live for over 300 years. For some reason, Carya illinoinensis is the state tree of …… Texas.
