Search By Location 
 

Honey-Locust, Water-Locust (Gleditsia)

section divider
Home « Georgia « Seminole « Gleditsia

Honey-Locust, Water-Locust Genus Details

section divider
The honey- or water-locust are 50 to 100-foot trees with thorned twigs, branches and trunks. It has small, inconspicuous, yellow flowers amidst small leaves. The bean-like pods are much more noticeable. In contrast, the common locust (a different genus - robinia) has much larger, "showier" flowers. These locust trees are commonly used as ornamentals and shade trees. The tree's common names (honey locust, sweet locust, honey shucks) likely come from the fact that the pulp of the pods tastes very sweet.

Honey-Locust, Water-Locust Allergy Info

section divider
This is not known to be a particularly allergenic pollen type.

Honey-Locust, Water-Locust Pollen Description

section divider
No pollen description is currently available.

Species in This Genus

section divider
Allergenicity Legend:
Mild Allergen Mild Allergen  |  Moderate Allergen Moderate Allergen  |  Severe Allergen Severe Allergen  |  Allergy Test Allergy Test Available
Honey-Locust, Water-Locust (Gleditsia) is a genus of the FABACEAE family.
This genus includes the following allergenic species:

Allergens and Plants Search

section divider Enter a full or partial species name to find more information on one of over 1200 potentially allergenic plants. For example, you can find chenopods searching on "cheno" (no quotes) as Latin Name.

Search By Plant Name:
 
 Common Name    Latin Name

Search By Alphabet:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Advertisement

Honey-Locust, Water-Locust Genus Location

section divider
The shaded areas on the map indicates where the genus has been observed in the United States. Click the map to see a full scale version of these allergy areas.
  - Native, observed in a county
  - Introduced, observed in a county
  - Rarely observed

Related Links

section divider
Advertisement
facebook_twitter

Advertisement