Black walnut (Juglans nigra) flowers and fruit. Bottom right: just-fertilized female black walnut flowers with the palm of my left hand for scale. The two green bushy structures on each flower are the styles. Top right: a black walnut female flower in situ on the tree; this flower has been fertilized and the ovary is expanding. The dark brown structure at the base of the flower is another, abortive, flower. Top left: a black walnut fruit in place on the tree. The two styles at the tip of the fruit gives an idea of scale relative to the flowers shown on the right. Bottom left: a nearly mature black walnut fruit; I’ve cut away half of the husk, revealing the walnut inside.
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.
Black walnut (Juglans nigra) stems and leaves. Top: a black walnut tree with half a dozen compound leaves arising from branches in the foreground and the trunk of the tree in the background. Bottom right: a single black walnut compound leaf with the upper surface of the leaflets visible in the upper image and the underside of the same leaflets (and leaf) visible in the lower image. Bottom left: the trunk and major branches of a black walnut tree. Note the deeply furrowed, gray bark.
Black walnut is a towering native tree, 80-120 feet tall and with a trunk 3-6 feet across at full maturity. The bark on the trunk is deeply furrowed, gray or almost black; the bark on the branches is gray and smoother. The leaves are alternate, odd-pinnate compound (although the terminal leaflet is often missing), 12-24″ long and 6″ across. The leaflets are about 3″ long and 1″ across; lance-shaped or a cross between lance- and egg-shaped, tapering abruptly to a pointed tip; slightly asymmetrical, especially near the base; nearly sessile; and with serrated margins. The prominent rachis (central stalk) of the compound leaf is fuzzy with short hairs, light green to pale brown. The petioles are stout, 3-6″ long, fuzzy, and light green to greenish brown.
A black walnut tree (Juglans nigra) growing on Wooded Island.
Black walnut is a towering native tree, 80-120 feet tall and with a trunk 3-6 feet across at full maturity. The bark on the trunk is deeply furrowed, gray or almost black; the bark on the branches is gray and smoother. The leaves are alternate, odd-pinnate compound (although the terminal leaflet is often missing), 12-24″ long and 6″ across. The leaflets are about 3″ long and 1″ across; lance-shaped or a cross between lance- and egg-shaped, tapering abruptly to a pointed tip; slightly asymmetrical, especially near the base; nearly sessile; and with serrated margins. The prominent rachis (central stalk) of the compound leaf is fuzzy with short hairs, light green to pale brown. The petioles are stout, 3-6″ long, fuzzy, and light green to greenish brown. 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.
