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Definition
Linear-lanceolate leaves. Maybe the most widely planted shade and street tree in the south. Has yellow soft hairs on the midrib. Bottomland species. |
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Lobatae Three artificial groups |
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Definition
The Red Oaks - True red, black oaks
- willow, laurel, water
- western live
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Definition
Red Oaks - Spinose teeth or bristle-tipped lobes
- Lobes are pointed
- If unlobed the margin, the margin has spines or bristles
- Acorns mature in 2 growing season
- Inner acorn cup is tomentose
- Summerwood pores are rounded, large, and thick-walled
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Definition
- Wide cirucular sinuses that extend more than half-way to midrib
- Concentric rings on top of the acorn
- Piedmont areas
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Definition
- Heteromorphic leaves
- U-shaped base
- Upland
- Leaves are often marcescent
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Definition
Quercus laevis turkey oak
- Foliage often arranged vertically
- Falcate lobes
- Shaggy cap
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Scrubby tree Thick leathery broadly obovate leaves with very shallow lobes Used for fuel wood |
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Definition
Quercus marilandica blackjack oak Scrubby tree Thick leathery broadly obovate leaves with very shallow lobes Used for fuel wood |
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Definition
Bark looks like black cherry bark Largest of the southern oaks Found on better drained bottom sites |
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Definition
Usually 5 lobes Small acorns with thin caps Common name refers to small "pin-like" branches |
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Definition
Leaves with 7-11 bristled lobes unsually less than half-way to midrib Wide "ski trails" on bark Most important tree of the genus Upland oak on moist, well-drained sites "cove sites" |
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Definition
Narrow "ski trails" A bottomland species Used as oak floors, furniture |
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Definition
Sinuses are often offset Squared-off sinuses Bark is not as deeply farrowed as some of the other red oaks Green tree reservoirs |
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Definition
Aromatic Moist habitats Shade tolerant Burns very hot Berries used for candles Often an ornamental |
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Definition
Acorn cup scales are loosely imbricate Bear paw leaves Inner bark is bright orange and bitter tasting |
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Quercus hemisphaerica laurel oak, Darlington oak |
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Definition
Leaves are leather (coriaceous), semi-persistent often remaining on tree just before new leaves appear Lower coastal plain species |
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Quercus incana bluejack oak |
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Definition
Small, poorly formed tree in sandhill scrub oak communities o coastal plain Frequently found in longleaf pine or slash pine communities Found on poor sandy soils Leaves are elliptical, broadest above the middle; 2-4 inches long; may have some shallow bristle tipped lobes; surface is bluish-green above and white wooly below |
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Definition
Leaves tend to be more membranous than laurel oaks with conspicuous reticulate veins seen when held to light Found on wetter sites than Q. hemisphaerica, poorly drained flats, wet hammocks, swamp margins Leaves vary from spatulate, lobed, to rhombic Foliage varies from promptly deciduous to tardily deciduous, often holding green leaves over winter |
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Term
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Definition
Very cosmopolitan-found in many different habitats and associates with many different species Best growth is on bottomlands Extensively used in the South as an ornamental Leaves exhibit heteroblastic change; spatulate shaped mature leaves, irregularly lobed immature leaves |
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Definition
True white oaks Chestnut oaks Live oaks |
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Definition
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Definition
Fringe tree "Old man's beard" opposite leaves showy white flowers |
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Definition
Leaf scar is half moon Bottomland Ecologically adaptable Lanceolate, elliptical leaves |
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Definition
Smiley face leaf scar Bud sits in the scar Used to make tool handles and sporting goods Uplands |
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Fraxinus profunda Pumpkin ash |
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Definition
Swamps swollen base wider samara |
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Definition
Aggressive invasive Shade tolerant Opposite, simple, elliptical leaves |
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Definition
Exfoliating bark Enlarged petiole base that covers bud Global cluster of achenes Dunce shaped buds Alluvial sites Butcher block Large eastern hardwood |
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Definition
Mostly tropical Economically important |
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Definition
Shade intolerant bi-tri pinnately compound leaves Frequently occuring escaped exotic |
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Definition
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Definition
Monotypic Horse apple-->multiple drupes Twigs are frequently armed Most decay resistant wood in N. America "bois d'arc" --> bow wood "Ozark wood carvers" |
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Definition
False terminal bud Shade tolerant Polymorphic leaves |
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Definition
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Definition
Stipulate leaves Monoecious |
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Definition
Inequilateral base Flowers appear after leaves have dropped Shoots the seeds Moist lower slopes of upland forests |
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Definition
Multiple of capsules Goes all the way down to Central America Most widespread in southern forest Forms epicormic branches |
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Definition
Ornamental value Leaves, twigs, seeds poisonous |
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Definition
Polymorphic leaves Leaves smell like fruit loops Pioneer species |
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Definition
Laurel family Tropical evergreen Aromatic leaves |
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Term
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Definition
What family has....Diaphragmed pith Stipules enclose bud Fruit is a follicle or samara |
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Definition
One of the largest eastern hardwoods Afflack tree Tulip like flowers Conelike aggregate of samaras |
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Definition
Silvery bud Loose textured soil |
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Definition
Found with carniverous plants Indicator species for upland bog "baygall sites" |
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Term
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Definition
Q. alba Q. lyrata Q. macrocarpa Q. stellata |
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Definition
Acorn has turbinate cap Resistant to salt spray and high soil salinity Navy ships used to be made out of it |
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Definition
Was the most important tree in N. America Nutritious and flavorful nuts Tannin Durable and decay resistant wood |
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Definition
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Definition
Simple alternate persistent or deciduous leaves Pinnately veined and short petioled Imperfect flowers, monoecious plants Fruit is a nut enclosed in a burr or cup |
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Definition
Acorns are paired Velvety white pubescence below |
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Quercus gambellii Gambel oak |
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Definition
Not a tall tee, Only oak found in the Rocky Mtns. |
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Term
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Definition
Twigs often form corky wings Large acorn with heavily fringed cap Drought resistant |
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Definition
Lobes make leaf look like a cross |
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Quercus lyrata overcup oak |
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Definition
No bristle tips Irregularly spaced sinuses Acorn cup nearly encloses nut Poor form with crooked bole and branches |
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Definition
No bristle tips Rounded margin and apex Hairless nobby acorn cup cove sites |
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Robinia pseudoacacia Black locust |
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Definition
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Rhododendron canescens wild azalea |
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Definition
Leaves cluster at the end of twigs Grey pubescence |
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Definition
Spurge family Chinese tallow |
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Definition
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Ilex decidua deciduous holly |
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Definition
Leaves are soft--not leather--deciduous Persistent drupes |
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Definition
Leaves with spines on the margins Tall trees often only have a spine at the apex Resistant to salt spray Found on upland sites Shade tolerant |
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Definition
Understory pest in pine stands Native americans used it to cleanse the soul |
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Term
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Definition
Genus known for producing edible fruits such as cranberries and blueberries, shrubs to small trees, alternate leaves, short petioles, deciduous or persistent, fruit is a small round berry, green to red to black |
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Term
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Definition
5 leaflets sometimes 7 upland thin twigs pear shaped nut that splits halfway to base |
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Term
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Definition
5 leaflets rarely 7 sweet nut fastest growing hickory bark breaks in to long plates curving away from the trunk |
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Term
Carya glabra var. odorata |
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Definition
Usually 7 leaflets sometimes 5 Oval fruit that splits to base |
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Term
Carya carolinae-septentrionalis Southern shagbark hickory |
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Definition
Slender glabrous twigs Basic pH soils |
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Term
Carya laciniosa shellbark hickory |
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Definition
Twigs are orange-brown with prominent lenticles Leaves- the lower surface is pale yellow-green, velvety pubescent Largest nut of all hickories |
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Definition
7 or 9 leaflets (rarely 5) Leaflets are very fragrant Lower surface pale yellow-green to orange-brown, densely pubescent Rachis stout, grooved, pubescent Twigs are stout and pubescent Tight interlacing bark Hust of nut splits to base Upland |
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Term
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Definition
Leaves: 7-13 leaflets all leaflets similar in size often falcate in shape Terminal bud: valvate with 4 to 6 scales often covered with hair Fruit: husks broadly winged at sutures |
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Term
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Definition
7 to 11 leaflets slender rachis Twigs are reddish-brown with orange-brown lenticles; somewhat pubescent Terminal bud is valvate, sulfur yellow, pubescent Bitter seed Bottomland in south |
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Term
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Definition
Valvate terminal bud 9 to 17 leaflets highly valuable sweet seed Fastest growing hickory |
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Term
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Definition
Edible often marketed fruit Stout twigs Short hairy buds Chambered pith Superposed buds Distinctive leaf scars Allelopathic-prevents the growth of other plants species near the tree |
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Term
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Definition
Streambanks and moist upland sites/coves Rare throughout range due to canker fungus Allelopathic |
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Definition
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Sapium sebiferum Chinese tallow |
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Definition
ornamental escaped and a major invasive |
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Term
Juglandaceae Walnut family |
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Definition
monoecious nut encased in a husk leaves are often aromatic |
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Term
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Definition
What Genus has... Trichome morphology and vestiture Intrinisic variability and interspecific hybridization Monoecious plants with imperfect flowers Nut with semiwoody husk Bundle scars--3 u-shaped clusters Homogenous pith, somewhat stellate |
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Term
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Definition
What section of the Genus Carya has... 5-7 leaflets, terminal leaflet is the largest imbricate bud with 6-9 thin scales, nut case with unwinged husk and sometimes ribbed at sutures |
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Term
Arbutus menziesii Pacific madrone |
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Definition
Widely distributed throughout Pacific coast Bark is deciduous during the summer/fall Flowers- drooping terminal panicles Fruit is in a cluster of orange-red berry-like drupes |
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Term
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Definition
Infructescence consists of drooping branch covered with small capsules Often displays orange-red bark within furrows Ridges often broken into recognizable rectangles Leaves are folded along the midrib |
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Term
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Definition
What genus... Is best known for the edible fruits like cranberries and blueberries Leaves are alternate, short petioles, deciduous or persistent Fruit is a small round berry, green to red to black Shrubs to small trees |
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