Saul's oak, Quercus saulii

 

Q. alba X Q. montana (prinus)

 

Will F. Blozan

President, Eastern Native Tree Society

President, Appalachian Arborists, Inc.

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Barry Caselli
Sent: Monday, June 15, 2009 11:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ENTS] Re: oaks survey question

 


Will again,

To go along with my last response, I photographed all the leaves in my oak
leaf collection that are from the trees in question, and attached the photos
to this message. The leaves in DSC01039 are from the tree here, and the
leaves in DSC01040 are from the tree at work. They appear to be virtually
identical. But as yet I can't identify the species. If memory serves, the
bark is similar to that of white oak. I can go into the woods and look for
sure tomorrow if need be. But these are the leaves anyway.

Thanks,

Barry

P.S.- I also have a bunch of leaves I collected a couple years ago at Aetna
Furnace, which I also can't identify. I will photograph and post them
tomorrow.

--- On Mon, 6/15/09, Will Fell <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Will Fell <[email protected]>
Subject: [ENTS] Re: oaks survey question
To: "ENTSTrees" <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, June 15, 2009, 12:16 PM


Barry

Could your lobed white oak be Overcup Oak? It has very large
distinctive acorns or maybe it is swamp white oak. I have never seen
one, but understand the leaves are somewhat like overcup oak. Swamp
Chestnut Oak leaves are unlobed and almost identical to Chestnut Oak,
it just has white oak bark and large sweet acorns.

On Jun 14, 7:05 pm, Barry Caselli <[email protected]
<http://us.mc544.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]> >
wrote:
> ENTS,
> I've been thinking about asking this question for a few days now. I think
it would be interesting to read everyone's answers.
> Here it is:
> What species of oak are native to your area- the general area in which you
live and work? I'm not really concerned with planted varieties, just the
native trees. I love oak trees, so I'm really interested in people's
answers.
>  
> Here's my answer (which I've given a couple times in other posts):
> My area is the New Jersey Pine Barrens, and the oaks are:
>  
> White Oak, Quercus alba
> Post-Oak, Quercus stellata
> Chestnut-Oak, Quercus prinus
> Black Oak, Quercus velutina
> Scarlet Oak, Quercus coccinea
> Spanish Oak, Quercus falcata
> Black-jack Oak, Quercus marilandica
> Willow Oak, Quercus phellos (not listed in Pine Barrens field guide)
>  
> Willow Oak can be found in many places, though it's not as widespread as
the others. Half the species on that list can be found right here on our
property.
> We also have an oak on the property that has leaves similar to those of
White Oak, but with many lobes, as if it's a lobed version of Chestnut-oak.
Could it be Swamp Chestnut Oak? Or maybe some naturally occurring hybrid?
>  
> Also there are two oaks that are shrubs:
>  
> Scrub-Oak, Quercus ilicifolia
> Dwarf Chestnut-oak, Quercus prinoides
>  
> Yesterday I found a new location for Dwarf Chestnut-oak, only about 6
miles from here. It is quite uncommon compared to Scrub Oak.
>  
> I used my pine barrens field guide to get all the correct spellings, and
for some reason a few of the names are hyphenated, which I didn't know,
previously.
> Thanks,
> Barry
</table




 


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