Their is a whole bunch of different nuts, each come from their own respective tree. You would have to be more specific as to which type of nut.
The hickory tree produces small nuts that are edible.
The hazelnut tree, also known as the Corylus avellana tree, produces hazelnuts. They are grown primarily for their delicious and nutritious nuts and are often used in baking and cooking.
Chinquapin is a type of small tree or shrub that produces edible nuts. The nuts resemble chestnuts and have a sweet flavor when roasted. They are also known for their ornamental value in landscaping due to their attractive foliage and flowers.
Chestnuts are the fruit of the Horse Chestnut tree, Aesculus hippocastanum, so yes they are a form of tree nut.
Hickory trees typically produce nuts in a three year cycle. One year they will produce a heavy crop of nuts, the next year they will have a crop that is light to moderate, and the next year they produce very few nuts.
Pecan tree
Pine tree. It produces cones.
The hickory tree produces small nuts that are edible.
The hazelnut tree, also known as the Corylus avellana tree, produces hazelnuts. They are grown primarily for their delicious and nutritious nuts and are often used in baking and cooking.
No it is a hedgerow shrub/tree that produces "hazel" nuts.
An Oak tree can be in forests,woods,gardens and schools!! it produces Brown nuts called acorns
Yes. It produces nuts, wood and a natural habitat for much wildlife.
Oak Trees produce acorns not nuts. Infact, your wrong, the acorn produces acorns which are nuts. Acorns are often classified as oak nuts. But I'm afraid I don't have the equation, apparently there is one somewhere on the web. I suppose it also depends on how many oak tree flowers are pollinated.
Vanilla flavour comes from an Orchid not a tree.
Chinquapin is a type of small tree or shrub that produces edible nuts. The nuts resemble chestnuts and have a sweet flavor when roasted. They are also known for their ornamental value in landscaping due to their attractive foliage and flowers.
A buckeye nut comes from the Ohio buckeye tree (Aesculus glabra). The tree produces small, dark brown nuts with a light tan patch that resemble the eye of a male deer, hence the name "buckeye." These nuts are toxic when eaten and are often used in crafts or for good luck charms rather than for consumption.
Walnut tree