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Swamp white oak

Quercus bicolor Willd.

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Swamp white oak leaf
Swamp white oak
Swamp white oak habit
Swamp white oak bark
Swamp white oak
Swamp white oak staminate inflorescence
Swamp white oak acorn
Swamp white oak acorn
Swamp white oak leaf

Morphology

Trunk
Erect; branches unarmed; bark light gray to grayish brown, fissures shallow, ridges flat, plates blocky, flat; wood light brown, dense.
Twigs
Brown to grayish brown, rigid, somewhat brittle, glabrous or with scattered simple or branched hairs; leaf scars crescent-shaped to nearly hemispheric; buds brown to reddish brown, globose to ovoid, .08 to .12 inch, apex rounded to obtuse, glabrous or sparsely hairy, scales ciliate.
Leaves
Deciduous, alternate, simple; stipules deciduous; petiole .4 to 1 inch, glabrate to sparsely hairy with branched hairs; blade obovate to narrowly elliptic in outline, 4.8 to 8.8 inches long, 2.8 to 5.6 inches wide, base cuneate to acute, margins shallowly (3-)5-8-lobed, -scalloped, or -toothed per side, sometimes lobed proximally and scalloped or toothed distally, lateral lobes oblong, spreading or projecting forward, sinuses extending 1/5-1/4 distance to midrib, lobe apex obtuse to rounded, not bristle-tipped, lower surface stellate-tomentose, grayish green or dull green, upper surface glabrate or sparsely stellate-hairy along veins, dull to shiny green.
Flowers
Inflorescences staminate catkins at base of new growth, 25-35-flowered, pendent, 1.6 to 3.2 inches; peduncle .24 to .8 inch; pedicels absent; pistillate spikes axillary from new growth, 1-3(-5)-flowered; peduncle 1 to 2 inches; pedicels absent. Flowers unisexual, more or less radially symmetric; staminate flowers: sepals 2-6, connate, calyx lobes .05 to .06 inch; petals absent; stamens 5-7; pistillate flowers: sepals 6, connate, calyx fused to ovary; petals absent; pistil 1; styles 3.
Fruit
September-October; acorns, maturing first year; peduncle elongating to .8 to 3 inches; cup hemispheric to top-shaped, .4 to .6 inch long, .6 to 1 inch long, enclosing 1/3 to 3/4 of nut, scale apices irregularly recurved; nut light brown, ellipsoid to ovoid, .8 to 1.2 inch long, .5 to .7 inch wide, glabrous; attachment scar .3 to .55 inch diam.; seed 1.

Ecology

Habitat
Floodplains, wet meadows, edges of swamps.
Distribution
East 1/7 of Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

There are historical reports of swamp white oak in extreme eastern Kansas in public land survey system records from the 1850s and 1860s. Swamp white oak was found to be common on the Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge in Linn County in 2004. Subsequent field and herbarium work revealed additional populations in Franklin, Johnson, and Miami Counties, all along the eastern border of the state. Swamp white oak is sometimes planted as a shade tree.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Fagaceae - Beech Family
Height
Trees, to 98 feet
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2019-12-08
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: May