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  2. Carya ovata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_ovata

    Carya ovata, the shagbark hickory, is a common hickory native to eastern North America, with two varieties. The trees can grow to quite a large size but are unreliable in their fruit output. The trees can grow to quite a large size but are unreliable in their fruit output.

  3. Carya laciniosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_laciniosa

    Carya laciniosa, the shellbark hickory, in the Juglandaceae or walnut family is also called kingnut, big, bottom, thick, or western shellbark, attesting to some of its characteristics. It is a slow-growing, long-lived tree, hard to transplant because of its long taproot, and subject to insect damage.

  4. Hickory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hickory

    An extract from shagbark hickory bark is used in an edible syrup similar to maple syrup, with a slightly bitter, smoky taste. The Cherokee people would produce a green dye from hickory bark, which they used to dye cloth.

  5. Pseudexentera cressoniana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudexentera_cressoniana

    Pseudexentera cressoniana, known generally as the shagbark hickory leafroller or oak olethreutid leafroller, is a species of tortricid moth in the family Tortricidae. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The MONA or Hodges number for Pseudexentera cressoniana is 3246 .

  6. Carya tomentosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_tomentosa

    Carya tomentosa, commonly known as mockernut hickory, mockernut, white hickory, whiteheart hickory, hognut, bullnut, is a species of tree in the walnut family Juglandaceae. The most abundant of the hickories , and common in the eastern half of the United States, it is long lived, sometimes reaching the age of 500 years.

  7. Kanuchi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanuchi

    Dried hickory nutmeat is high in both fat and protein, [4] containing 3% water, 18% carbohydrates, 13% protein, and 64% fats.The nut was generally rendered into oil or made into a kind of nutmeal ball that could be used to make stock for stews and soups. [5]

  8. Carya glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carya_glabra

    Carya glabra, the pignut hickory, is a common, but not abundant species of hickory in the oak-hickory forest association in the Eastern United States and Canada. Other common names are pignut , sweet pignut , coast pignut hickory , smoothbark hickory , swamp hickory , and broom hickory .

  9. Oak–hickory forest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oak–hickory_forest

    The current oak–hickory forest includes the former range of the oak–chestnut forest region, which encompassed the northeast portion of the current oak–hickory range. When the American chestnut population succumbed to invasive fungal blight in the early 20th century, those forests shifted to an oak and hickory dominated ecosystem.