Base de datos de plantas del FNPS

Carya floridana

scrub hickory
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS

Nomenclatura

Nombre común:

scrub hickory

Sinónimo(s):

Especie del género:

Carya floridana

Familia:

Juglandaceae

Especificaciones de la planta

Forma:

tree

Tamaño:

15-30 (47) ft

Esperanza de vida:

Long-lived perennial

Color de la flor:

yellow,green

Color de la fruta:

green,brown

Fenología:

Deciduous. Blooms (inconspicuous) early spring. Fruits ripe in fall.

Destacado por:

Hurricane Wind Resistance, Fall Color

Paisajismo

Usos recomendados:

Specimen tree. Use only where roots will be undisturbed.

Consideraciones:

Nuts and leaf litter can be messy.

Disponibilidad:

Native Nurseries

Propagación:

Can be grown from seed.

Luz:

Full Sun, Part Sun

Tolerancia a la humedad:

Siempre inundado---------------------------------Extremadamente seco

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Not wet but not extremely dry -a- Very long very dry periods

Tolerancia a inundaciones por agua salada:

Unknown

Tolerancia a la niebla salina/suelo salado:

Low/no tolerance of salty wind or direct salt spray

Suelo u otro sustrato:

Sand

pH del suelo:

Acidic to circum-neutral

Apto para cultivo en:

9A,9B

Las zonas del USDA se basan en la temperatura mínima extrema invernal anual promedio.

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Acreditado en:

Distribution
Vouchered
Not vouchered
Selected
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No county distribution is available for this plant yet.
Starting…
Map coded by Melissa Fernandez-de Cespedes (Paynes Prairie Chapter)

Ecología

Fauna:

Caterpillars, Mammals

Larval host for many moths including; luna moth ( Actias luna ), hickory leafroller moth ( Argyrotaenia juglandana ), royal walnut moth ( Citheronia regalis ), and walnut sphinx ( Amorpha juglandis.


The species is wind pollinated, but the honeybee has been observed collecting pollen from the catkins (Deyrup et al. 2002).

Fruits eaten by small mammals. 

Hábitats nativos:

Sandhill, clayhill, scrub

Área de distribución natural en Florida:

Comentarios:

Etnobotánica:

Fruit is edible but hard to get to (takes a major whack on the shell).

Comentarios generales:

FNPS Plant Print

Citas:

Deyrup, Mark, Jay Edirisinghe, and Beth Norden. (2002). The diversity and floral hosts of bees at the Archbold Biological Station, Florida (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Insecta Mundi, 544. ( https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/insectamundi/544/ ). Accessed 2026. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE.


Haehle, Robert G. and Joan Brookwell. (1999). Native Florida Plants. Gulf Publishing Company. Houston, TX.


Huegel, Craig N. (2010). Native Plant Landscaping for Florida Wildlife. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.


Wunderlin, R. P., B. F. Hansen, A. R. Franck, and F. B. Essig. (1999+). Atlas of Florida Plants. ( https://florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/ ). [S. M. Landry and K. N. Campbell (application development), USF Water Institute.] Institute for Systematic Botany, University of South Florida, Tampa.

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