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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.
- Shumard Red Oak, Swamp Red Oak, Shumard Oak, Spotted Oak - Texas A&M ...
Shumard Red Oak is an upright tree which can attain a height...
- Shumard Red Oak, Swamp Red Oak, Shumard Oak, Spotted Oak - Texas A&M ...
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.