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Otto: Kentucky coffee trees common, but special

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This Kentucky coffee tree at Baker Field Park is one of many in St. Charles. (Photo provided)

Anyone care for a little coffee? Kentucky coffee tree, that is.

These unusual trees, with their sparse branches and chunky seed pods, are a fairly common site in parks and along streets in St. Charles and other suburban communities.

They’re planted with regularity, thanks to their tolerance of dry conditions and poor soils, as well as their valued open canopy, which allows light to pass through and enables grass to grow underneath. (But not, as I understand, because they’re a great substitute for coffee. Early settlers made due by grinding the seeds, but as soon as real coffee hit American shores, this practice was largely abandoned.)

Even so, coffee trees are easy to spot. But don’t let their commonness fool you. If it weren’t for our municipalities’ planting efforts, this tree would probably be quite rare. Why? Because, last time I checked, we here in St. Charles – and pretty much everyone, everywhere else – were fresh out of mastodons.

Maybe a little more explanation is in order. Kentucky coffee trees, like many plant species in our area, date back through the millennia to a time when king-size animals known as megafauna roamed the land. Mastodons were megafauna, as were mammoths, giant ground sloths and saber-toothed cats. These critters ate, slept and reproduced just as our deer, raccoons and coyotes do today, but they did so during the Ice Age, the time when glaciers covered our landscape.

As the animals were going about their business, plants like the Kentucky coffee tree also were trying to survive. One primary need was, and remains today, a mechanism of seed dispersal. Anchored by roots in the ground, a parent plant has little choice but to trust its progeny – in the form of seeds – to either wind, water, or some sort of animal transportation. (Picture dandelion seeds blowing in the summer air, or American lotus pods floating along the Mississippi. Oh, don’t forget those burs you and your dog pick up on walks. They’re just one more example, albeit an annoying one, of an amazingly successful seed dispersal strategy.)

Anyway, way back when, the Kentucky coffee tree developed its characteristic thick pods, which are lined with a pulp that is sticky and sweet (and toxic to some animals), as a means of encouraging megafauna like mastodons to graze upon them. A big bite, a little chewing, and down the pods went into the jumbo creature’s digestive system.

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