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Black Locust

Black Locust

Robinia pseudoacacia

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The Black Locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) is a fast-growing, nitrogen-fixing tree native to eastern North America that has become one of the most widely planted — and controversial — tree species in the world. Prized for its extraordinarily durable, rot-resistant hardwood, showy white flower clusters, and rapid growth, it has been introduced across Europe, Asia, and South America, where it often escapes cultivation and becomes a aggressive invasive species.

• Produces some of the most durable hardwood in North America — Black Locust fence posts can last 50 to 100 years in the ground without chemical treatment, rivaling the longevity of tropical hardwoods
• A nitrogen-fixing legume (family Fabaceae) that enriches poor soils through symbiotic Rhizobium bacteria in root nodules
• Among the hardest of all North American commercial timbers, with a Janka hardness rating of 1,700 lbf — harder than white oak, sugar maple, or ash
• Introduced to Europe in the early 17th century and now naturalized across much of the continent, where it is both valued and reviled
• The genus name Robinia honors the French royal gardener Jean Robin, who introduced the tree to Europe in 1601 by planting the first specimen in Paris — a tree that still survives today

Taxonomy

Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Tracheophyta
Class Magnoliopsida
Order Fabales
Family Fabaceae
Genus Robinia
Species Robinia pseudoacacia
Robinia pseudoacacia is native to the eastern and central United States.

• Indigenous to a region spanning from Pennsylvania and New Jersey southward through the Appalachian Mountains to northern Georgia and Alabama, and westward to southern Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, and Arkansas
• Original native range was likely concentrated in the Appalachian and Ozark Mountain regions, where it grew in association with oak-pine forests
• Now naturalized across virtually all of the continental United States, southern Canada, and much of Europe, temperate Asia, South America, and southern Africa
• First encountered by European botanists in the late 16th century during early colonial expeditions to Virginia
• Jean Robin, the royal herbalist to King Henri IV of France, received seeds from America and planted the first European specimen in the Place Dauphine in Paris in 1601 — that tree is documented as still alive in 1636 by Robin's son Vespasian
• Described by Linnaeus in 1753 as Robinia pseudoacacia — the species epithet "pseudoacacia" means "false acacia," reflecting the similarity of its compound leaves to those of the true acacias (Acacia spp.) of Africa and Australia
• By the 18th century, Black Locust had spread throughout European parks, estates, and forests as a prized ornamental and timber tree
• Extensively planted in Hungary, where it now covers approximately 20% of the country's forested area and is considered a national resource for honey production
Robinia pseudoacacia is a medium to large, fast-growing, deciduous tree.

Trunk and Bark:
• Typically reaches 12 to 25 meters (occasionally up to 30 meters) in height with a trunk diameter of 30 to 100 cm
• Bark dark gray to brownish-black, deeply furrowed into thick, interlacing ridges forming a characteristic rope-like or netted pattern
• Young branches greenish to reddish-brown, often armed with paired thorns at the nodes, each thorn 1 to 3 cm long
• Some thornless cultivars have been selected for horticultural use

Crown:
• Open, irregular, rounded to oblong, often with a somewhat scruffy or wild appearance
• Branches ascending to spreading, brittle in strong winds

Leaves:
• Odd-pinnate, 15 to 35 cm long, with 7 to 21 (commonly 9 to 19) oval to elliptic leaflets
• Leaflets 2 to 5 cm long, blue-green to dark green above, paler beneath, entire margins
• One of the last trees to leaf out in spring and one of the first to drop leaves in autumn
• Petioles bear small stipular thorns at the base

Flowers:
• Showy, fragrant, white to creamy-white, pea-like, approximately 2 cm long
• Produced in dense, pendulous racemes 10 to 20 cm long, creating spectacular cascading displays
• Blooming in late spring (May-June) after the leaves emerge
• Intensely fragrant — the sweet scent can carry for considerable distances

Fruit:
• Flat, linear legume pods, 5 to 12 cm long and 1 to 1.5 cm wide
• Dark brown to blackish when mature, containing 4 to 10 small, kidney-shaped seeds
• Pods persist on the tree through winter
Robinia pseudoacacia is an ecologically complex and highly adaptable species.

• A pioneer species of disturbed sites, forest edges, and degraded lands — its nitrogen-fixing ability allows it to colonize nutrient-poor soils where few other trees can survive
• Fast early growth (1 to 2 meters per year in favorable conditions) enables rapid site colonization
• Root suckering is prolific — trees spread clonally through root sprouts, forming dense thickets that exclude other vegetation
• The species is shade-intolerant and requires full sun for optimal growth
• Flowers provide one of the most important nectar sources for honeybees in eastern North America and Europe, producing a premium, light-colored honey with high fructose content
• The nitrogen-rich leaf litter improves soil fertility, benefiting subsequent plant colonizers in succession
• However, invasive populations significantly alter ecosystems — dense Black Locust thickets suppress native understory plants, change soil chemistry through nitrogen enrichment, and reduce biodiversity
• In Europe, Black Locust is listed among the top 10 most invasive alien species, threatening dry grassland, sand dune, and riparian habitats
• Relatively short-lived — 60 to 90 years is typical, though some specimens reach 150 years
• Susceptible to the locust borer (Megacyllene robiniae), which can severely damage mature trees
Black Locust is abundant and not threatened in any part of its range.

• Listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List due to its extensive native and naturalized range
• The species is among the most widely distributed North American trees globally
• In its native range, populations are stable and the species is often common in successional habitats
• Conservation concerns instead center on its invasiveness outside its native range — in many European countries, active eradication programs target Black Locust in sensitive natural habitats
• Genetic diversity in native Appalachian populations is high and well-conserved

Fun Fact

Black Locust honey is considered one of the finest honeys in the world — exceptionally clear, light, slow to crystallize, and never overly sweet. In Hungary, where Black Locust forests cover over 450,000 hectares, the annual acacia honey production is a nationally important agricultural product worth millions of euros, and Hungarian acacia honey is exported as a premium delicacy worldwide.

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