Distribution: eastern Canada; central, northeastern and southeastern United States incl. Kansas
Quercus palustris Münchh. - Accepted: Quercus palustris Münchh. bei Zander 2008; Familie: Fagaceae (Zander 2008)Quercus palustris Münchh. - Accepted: Quercus palustris Münchh. bei The Plant List (2010); Familie: Fagaceae (APG III)Quercus palustris Münchh. - Accepted: Quercus palustris Münchh. bei The Plant List (2014), version 1.1; Familie: Fagaceae (APG III)Quercus palustris Münchh. - Accepted: Quercus palustris Münchh. bei The Plant List (2014), version 1.1; Familie: Fagaceae (APG IV)Quercus palustris Münchh. - Accepted: Quercus palustris Münchh. bei BfN Checklist Flora DE; Familie: Fagaceae (APG IV)
Flowers
monoecious; male flowers in drooping catkins on preceding year twigs, female flowers in short spikes on current year shoots
Flower ecology
wind-pollinated (anemophilous)
Life form
tree
Foliage persistence
deciduous
Fruits
acorns with a maximum length of 1.3 cm (0.5 inches)
Fruit ecology
animal-dispersed (zoochorous) (squirrels, mice, blue jays, woodpeckers)
Soil conditions
on acidic, poorly drained, clay to clayey loam soils
Root type
shallow root system
Natural occurrence (habitat)
bottomland deciduous forests (mixed with sweetgum, white oak, American elm, red maple), floodplain forests, wet bottomlands along rivers
Vegetation typ and synecology (plant community)
temperate, mixed mesophytic deciduous forests
Constraints according temperature
susceptible to fire
Constraints according radiation (light)
intolerant of shade
Constraints according habitat
tolerant of acid rain and smoke
Usage
for construction timbers, fuel and mine props; planted as shade and ornamental tree
Phytopathogenic organisms
susceptible to Oak Wilt caused by the fungus Ceratocytis fagacearum
Carey, J. H. (1992): Quercus palustris. 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/quepal/all.html; 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.; 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; The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. www.iucnredlist.org;
Last update:
Taxonomic update: Helmut Dalitz on: 21.6.2021Update of the description: Matthias Krause; latest by: Matthias Krause on: 18.2.2019In 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.