Search for featured oaks. Acorns and leaves not drawn in same scale.

Showing posts with label Yellow butt oak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yellow butt oak. Show all posts

Monday

Quercus velutina



Name: Quercus velutina

Synonyms:   Quercus velutina var. missouriensis, Quercus leiodermis, 

Local Names:   Black oak,  Yellow oak, Quercitron oak, Quercitron, Yellow-bark oak, Yellowbark oak, Yellow butt oak, Smooth-bark oak, Smoothbark oak

Acorn:    Ovoid acorns, 1/2 to 3/4 inch long, 1/3 to 1/2 enclosed in a bowl-shaped cap; cap scales are loosely appressed (particularly loose on edges of cap), light brown and fuzzy, matures in 2 years in late summer and fall.

Leaves:  Alternate, simple, 4 to 10 inches long, obovate or ovate in shape with 5 (mostly) to 7 bristle-tipped lobes; leaf shape is variable, with sun leaves having deep sinuses and shade leaves having very shallow sinuses, lustrous shiny green above, paler with a scruffy pubescence and axillary tufts below. 

Range:   Widely distributed throughout Eastern and Central United States and extreme Southwestern Ontario, Canada.  In the United States, occurs from southwestern Maine west to southern Wisconsin and southeastern Minnesota; south through Iowa to eastern Nebraska, eastern Kansas, central Oklahoma, and eastern Texas; and east to northwestern Florida and Georgia

References:  (1) (2) (3) (4)
 
Additional information and links on the genus Quercus:
Plants List: Quercus
Oaks of The World 
Quercus images on Google
Oak images on Google
List of genus Quercus and subgenus Cyclobalanopsis
USDA Plant List: Search Page (Type Quercus)



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