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Compare sources for Quercus bicolor

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Field
Oak Compendium
Oaks of the World
The Sibley Guide to Trees
Common Names
Swamp White Oak
swamp white oak, bicolor oak, blue oak
Swamp White Oak, Swamp Oak
Geographic Range

NE U.S.A.; South Canada; 0 to 1000 m; introduced in Europe in 1800;

Growth Habit

reaches 20 m, and even more;

Deciduous. Large tree often 70’. Ofetn with twiggy tufts looking coarse and unkept.

Leaves

8-20 x 5-11 cm; oboval; apex broadly rounded; base narrowly cuneate; 3-6 pairs of shallow lobes at apical 1/2; bright green and glabrous above; pale glaucous and slightly pubescent beneath (simple and stellate hairs), somewhat velvety; 3-7 pairs of secondary veins; orangish at fall; short petiole 0.4-2 cm;

  • 6 1/2”
  • relatively few irregualr teeth or sharo shallow lobes
  • underleaf whitish
Fruits (Acorns)

acorn ovoid 2-3 cm long, singly or paired or to 3; cupule scaly, deep, enclosing 1/2 to 2/3 of nut, with appressed scales; long peduncle 2-7 cm; cotyledons distinct;

  • 1”
  • cup deeply fringed
  • long thin peduncle
Bark

strips like alba but generally rougher, older trunks furrowed and blocky

Buds

relatively small, blunt, unlike montana or michauxii

Hardiness & Habitat

hardy; prefers moist, lime-free soils; long-living;

Common in wet woods and swamps, bottomlands, flood plains.
Commonly cultivated
Zones 4-8

Additional Information

– A. Camus : n° 189 ; – Sub-genus Quercus, Section Quercus, Subsection Prinoideae; – Related to Q.macrocarpa ;

Hybridizes commonly with michauxii where range overlaps. Hybrids tend to have more deeply lobed leaves and varying degrees of development of awns (fringe along the margin of the acorn cuo).
Apparently hybrids with macrocarpa are common in the Upper Midwest with intermediate leaf and acorn.