// SPECIES PROFILE · TREE · NATIVE
Kentucky coffeetree is an evolutionary anachronism — its huge leathery seedpods evolved to be eaten by mastodons that vanished 12,000 years ago, leaving the species largely dependent on humans for dispersal today. Massive bipinnate leaves give it the most tropical look of any Oklahoma native.
[ growing · ecology · siting · care ]
Exceptional urban tree: pollution-tolerant, no serious pests, deep taproot anchors against tornado winds. Plant a male cultivar (Espresso, Prairie Titan) to skip the messy pods. Beans were roasted as a coffee substitute by frontier settlers — but raw seeds are toxic, do not eat.
Why it's on this list: living fossil · bold winter silhouette · tough urban native. Part of Rooted Revival's NE Oklahoma plant catalog — natives, ecologically positive non-invasive cultivars, and food crops worth growing in the Tulsa region.
[ guild · polyculture · cross-layer pairings ]
Along a stream or seasonal floodplain, kentucky coffeetree pairs naturally with: american elderberry (Sambucus canadensis), maypop / passionflower (Passiflora incarnata), cardinal flower (Lobelia cardinalis), eastern gamagrass (Tripsacum dactyloides), cosmos (Cosmos bipinnatus), and black walnut (Juglans nigra).
kentucky coffeetree works best as a canopy or sub-canopy partner above the herbaceous and shrub layers.




