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Native Plant Trust: Go Botany Discover thousands of New England plants

Family: Juglandaceae — walnut family

Our New England species in the Juglandaceae are trees with leaves that grow from alternating positions along the branch. The leaves are divided into leaflets arranged along a central axis. They are covered with tiny scales that are often resinous and aromatic. A single plant has both pollen-bearing and ovule-bearing flowers, arranged in separate clusters called aments (also called catkins). The flowers are small and usually have 4 tepals. The pollen-bearing flowers have 3-50 stamens. The ovule-bearing flowers have 2 stigmas. The fruit, a drupe, consists of a large seed enclosed in a husk that is fibrous. The husk may or may not open along sutures at maturity.

This family’s genera in New England

Visit this family in the Dichotomous Key