This heavy, fleshy fruit appears not to be eaten by any animal native to North America. This is unusual as almost all large fleshy fruits' primary mode of seed dispersal[?] is by consumption by large animals. One theory is that the osage orange fruit was eaten by a giant sloth that became extinct around the same time as the first human settlement of North America. As horses and other livestock will eat the fruit, and the horse evolved in North America, they have also been suggested as the trees' original disperser. Humans do not eat this fruit; where not eaten by horses, they are mostly left to rot where they fall from the trees, though they are occasionally sold as a cockroach repellent. (This is either an error or simple fraud; the insects ignore them.)
Osage orange trees were once common in North America; by the time the European colonists arrived, they were restricted to a few river valleys in what is now the central United States. The trees picked up the name bois d'arc, or "bow-wood", because early French settlers observed the wood being used for bow-making by the Native Americans. The trees were also planted as fence-posts before the introduction of barbed wire.
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