Oak Woodlands
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The
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The
Word "Acorn"
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Acorns
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in Mature Trees
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Moss"
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Oak Flower
Acorns
start out as a few cells at the tip of the branch. The end of each twig
can have flowers of both sexes and of course, new leaves. With warm, sunny
weather in March or April, some cells swell into a vase-shaped ovary topped
with tiny, sticky, fuzzy knob, the pistil, ready to capture any wind-blown
pollen. The ovary walls become the acorn, and the petals and sepals
fuse into what becomes the "cap" on the acorn. Other cells at
the tip of the branch elongate and swell into a tiny waterfall of yellow
balls, each able to explode to release a cloud of pollen grains. At the
same time the ovaries and pollen form, other bud cells divide and grow
into crenulated sheaths that swell and stretch into the familiar leaves
we recognize. There are ways that oaks avoid self-breeding. Pollen and
female flowers appear on one tree at slightly different times, and apparently,
pollen from one oak does not pollinate the flowers on the same oak.
On the same tree,
other buds grow to produce male flowers. These "catkins" (see
below) have many tiny spheres, each opens and relseased thousands of pollen
grains that are blown in the air. Some reach the pistils of developing
acorns and polinate them. Is it not known how far pollen from one tree
can blow and still effectively pollinate female flowers on nearby oaks.
On
warm, spring days,
sometimes you can write your name on the windows of your car in all the
pollen. A sudden gust of wind disgorges yellow clouds from the oak woodland.
During other springs, the days can go on andon with constant cold drizzle,
washing the pollen into the ground. For wind-pollinated oaks, a cloudy,
wet spring can mean most flowers never catch the pollen they need to swell
into acorns. A sunny, hot spring often means many acorns that fall. Walt
Koenig has studied the relationship between warm spring weather and acorn
abundance in the following fall. Studies underway at Hastings show that
most oaks have a great abundance of flowers and they seem to develop normally.
Generally, there are more than enough flowers to grow into acorns and
provide adequate seeds for saplings to sustain a stable population of
oaks.

In most years, many
trees make acorns. Here is a picture of mature acorn. However, there are
some years when acorns are scarce everywhere, and some years when they
are abundant everywhere. These cycles of abundance are fascinating and
important to many kind of wildlife. For more on this, see the next section
on acorns.
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