mast year


A year in which forest trees produce an exceptionally heavy crop of nuts or seeds — far more than in a normal year. Mast years are irregular, synchronized across large areas, and ecologically consequential: wildlife populations surge in response to the abundance, and the forest floor becomes a carpet of acorns, beechnuts, or pine seeds. The phenomenon is called masting, and scientists still don't fully understand what triggers it.
Etymology
Mast from Old English mæst, the fruit of forest trees. A "mast year" is a year of abundance.
Notes
Related to the entry for mast in the animal behavior section.
animals forest Old English
*

Surprise Me With a Word