• Strange pods dropping from my magnolia

    From 1969cappy@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 9 15:06:56 2020
    Hi I live in NEWNAN Ga and have the same thing. The tree is a Star Magnolia and first year this happened.
    Tree obviously 15 or so years old. I am trying to find out as well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David E. Ross@21:1/5 to 1969cappy@gmail.com on Sat May 9 17:11:50 2020
    On 5/9/2020 3:06 PM, 1969cappy@gmail.com wrote:
    Hi I live in NEWNAN Ga and have the same thing. The tree is a Star
    Magnolia and first year this happened. Tree obviously 15 or so years
    old. I am trying to find out as well.

    Those are fruit, formed when the flowers fade. Yes, they are dry and
    not at all what you might think when you hear "fruit". To a botanist,
    however, they are indeed fruit.

    You might snap off any you can reach. A very few might form seeds,
    which can stress the plant. Thus, you remove them before they mature.
    This is the same thing as cutting away faded roses or other flowers
    before they form seeds.

    On a mature southern magnolia (M. grandiflora), these pods are large.
    The red seeds form in surface holes. Generally, they are too high up in
    the tree to remove. However, mature southern magnolias generally set
    seeds without suffering much stress. A mature southern magnolia is a
    very large tree, as much as 80 feet tall and spreading 60 feet. When
    mature, your star magnolia (M. stellata) is more like a very large
    shrub, not much more than 10 feet tall and spreading as much as 20 feet.
    Thus, the stress of setting seeds is greater for your magnolia than for
    a southern magnolia. Fortunately, the stress of setting seeds will NOT
    shorten the life of your tree; it might only reduce next year's flowers.

    --
    David E. Ross
    <http://www.rossde.com/>

    President Trump fired Rick Bright, who headed the
    government's development of a vaccine against the
    COVID-19 virus. The reason was that Bright would not
    endorse Trump's assertion that hydroxychloroquine might
    cure COVID-19. Is it possible that Trump was motivated
    by his and his family's investments in a major producer
    of hydroxychloroquine?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)