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  1. Texas oak (Quercus buckleyi) is a closely-related Central Texas counterpart to Shumard oak, but typically has smaller leaves and acorns; southern red oak (Q. falcata) has more variable leaves with pubescent undersides and small acorns; black oak (Q. velutina) has larger leaves with more regular lobing and a fringed acorn cup.

  2. An attractive shade tree. Similar to the Texas Oak (Quercus buckleyi), but prefers deeper soils and tends to grow taller and straighter. Can hybridize. A relatively fast growing and adaptable oak. This species is drought tolerant and also withstands short-term flooding. Native habitat: moist forests and stream bottoms.

  3. Shumard oak (Quercus shumardii) is very similar and the two species hybridize naturally where they occur together, but Shumard oak acorns are usually larger with a shallow cup and the leaves often have broader lobes.

  4. Shumard Red Oak is an upright tree which can attain a height of 120 feet. It is found on rich bottomland soils, moist woods and along streams in the eastern third of Texas. It is fast-growing, with an open canopy and stout spreading branches. Leaves are a rich green that turns scarlet in the fall.

  5. Shumard oak is native to the Atlantic coastal plain primarily from North Carolina to northern Florida and west to central Texas; it is also found north in the Mississippi River Valley to central Oklahoma, eastern Kansas, Missouri, southern Illinois, Indiana, western and southern Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee.

  6. Shumard Oak is a Texas native. This red oak offers good red fall color on some individuals in favorable years. With selection of adapted provenances, this is a durable landscape tree, with non-adapted provenances this species is prone to chlorosis and is short-lived.

  7. Shumard oak is found in the Atlantic Coastal Plain primarily from North Carolina to northern Florida and west to central Texas; it is also found north in the Mississippi River Valley to central Oklahoma, eastern Kansas, Missouri, southern Illinois, Indiana, western and southern Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee.