mast year
noun
plural mast years
: a year in which a tree or shrub (such as an oak, hickory, or hazel) growing in a particular region produces an unusually large number of fruits, seeds, or nuts : the periodic production of a greater than typical amount of mast (see mast entry 3)
After a mast year, acorn production the following year is much lower, probably because the tree expended a lot of energy putting out all those acorns and is taking it easy the next season.—Joan Morris
There is a good reason for mast years: Because of consumption by wildlife, as many as 500 acorns are needed to produce a single seedling. Flooding the forest floor with acorns is the oak trees' way of ensuring reproductive success.—Li Shen
Studies of beech in Britain have shown that up to 100% of beech seed is eaten by mice and birds in years when there is a poor crop but over 50% of seed may be left at the end of a winter following a mast year.—P. A. Thomas
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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