Tag: Seed of the Week (Page 91 of 142)

Seed of the Week: Sycamore or Planetree

No one recognized these round fruit from mystery seed of the week last week?

Perhaps you would have if you saw them hanging from a tree.

These are the seed clusters from a sycamore or plane tree. In most places throughout North America the species is the American sycamore, Platanus occidentalis. The photographs shown here are of the Arizona sycamore, Platanus wrightii.

Sycamore trees are often recognized by their mottled trunks and branches due to uneven shedding of the bark.

The Arizona sycamore often grows along streams. This one is along a stream in Ramsey Canyon, in southeastern Arizona.

Sycamore trees can grow to be quite large, upwards of 80 to 100 feet tall. They also have large, lobed leaves that faintly resemble a maple leaf.

Some people are concerned because there are few small sycamores growing up to replace these large old trees.

Firefly Forest has more photographs and information about Arizona sycamore trees.

Do sycamore trees grow where you live? What have you found out about them?

Mystery Seed of the Week 105

Hints:  We once had another plant of the same genus for a Seed of the Week.

The seeds have a similar squarish shape, although they were a different color. These seeds are formed in a pod (I don’t have a photograph of one.)

The brilliant yellow flowers of this small desert tree also resemble that of its orange-red relative, although its relative is a large shrub.

Can you guess what tree these seeds are from?

Edit:  the answer is now posted.

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