Useful information about the taxon (species, subspecies, variety...)


Quercus alba L. 1753

Fagaceae (APG IV)
white oak, stave oak, fork-leaf oak
Taxon concept: The Plant List (2014), version 1.1
Distribution: eastern Canada, eastern United States incl. Florida

Quercus alba L. - Accepted: Quercus alba L. bei The Plant List (2014), version 1.1; Familie: Fagaceae (APG III)

Color of flower
male (staminate) flowers yellowish, female (pistillate) flowers reddish
Flowers
monoecious; flowers in catkins
Flower ecology
wind-pollinated (anemophilous)
Life form
tree
Leaves
violet-purple foliage in autumn
Foliage persistence
deciduous
Fruits
short-stalked, glabrous acorns with warty cupule
Fruit ecology
zoochorous (by blue jays, grey squirrels and formerly by pigeons), anemochorous and barochorous
Soil conditions
common on rocky soils
Root type
taproot
Natural occurrence (habitat)
rich uplands, moist bottomlands, along streams, hammocks, sinks, sandy plains, gravelly slopes, coves, pine-oak-hickory woods, beech-maple forests, mixed deciduous forests, oak savannas (with post oak and bur oak)
Vegetation typ and synecology (plant community)
temperate, mesophytic broad-leaved deciduous and mixed forests and temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands
Constraints according radiation (light)
not shade tolerant
Constraints according habitat
moderately resistant to fire
Life span
long-lived tree (up to 600 years)
Usage
as ornamental tree; wood is currently used for furniture, veneer, staves of barrels (especially for whiskey barrels), flooring, paneling and interior woodwork; oils obtained from pressed acorns were used to alleviate joint pain; wood was used for railroad ties, fence posts, mine timbers, ships, and caskets; due to high fuel value very suitable as firewood
Bark
light grey bark

Erhardt, W., Götz, E., Bödeker, N. & Seybold, S. (2008): Der große Zander. Enzyklopädie der Pflanzennamen. Band 2. Arten und Sorten. Eugen Ulmer KG, Stuttgart (Hohenheim), 18. Aufl., 2103 S.;

Global Biodiversity Information Facilty (GBIF). Online Publication: www.gbif.org;

The International Plant Names Index (2009). Published on the Internet http://www.ipni.org; Courtesy to IPNI, 2009. Exported from IPNI at date: 2009-09-22 20:17:51;

Tirmenstein, D. A. (1991): Quercus alba. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). See: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/tree/quealb/all.html;





Last update:
Taxonomic update: Database method on: 4.3.2020
Update of the description: Matthias Krause; latest by: Matthias Krause on: 13.2.2019

In the list below you will find the geographic coordinates of many woody plants in the garden. In these cases the points are marked in the map.
If no coordinates are listed, the coordinate of the point in the map marks the middle coordinate of the section.

Sex Standort Accession number Planting year Donation IPEN Lat. Long.
Parzelle T LG-T-035-17822 1998 + XX-0-HOH-LG-T-035-17822 48,706418 9,212231
Parzelle H SP-HB-030-23472 2021 + XX-0-HOH-SP-HB-030-23472 48,7105779881 9,2129407103