Min. price: 1 lb price: Cust1 price: Cust2 price: Max. price:
Min. quant.: 1 lb quant: Cust1 quant: Cust2 quant: Max.quant:
Water Oak
Quercus nigra
Detailed Listing For:
Botanical Name:
Quercus Nigra
Family:
FAGACEAE
Genus:
Quercus
Species:
nigra
Common Name:
Water Oak
Lot#:
090323
Quantity:
7.6 lb
Avg Count Packet:
34
Average Seeds Per Pound:
304
Germination:
91%
Germination Test Type:
Cut
Purity:
99%
Height:
100 feet
Collection Locale:
Tennessee
Minimum Hardiness Zone:
7
1 pkt
$ 4.95
1 lb
$ 19.62
Characteristics
Deer Attracting
Fast Growth
Heat Tolerant
Moist Soil
Shade Tree
Specimen Tree
Timber
Wildlife food
Quantity:
Price:
Growing Info
Scarification
Soak in water, let stand in water for 24 hours
Stratification
cold stratify for 60 days, or until radicle emergence
Germination
sow 1" deep, tamp the soil, mulch the seed bed
Description
Wikipedia states: It is an oak in the red oak group (Quercus sect. Lobatae), native to the southeastern United States, from southern Delaware and south to the coastal areas of Maryland, Virginia, the piedmont of North Carolina, all of South Carolina, most ofGeorgia (with the exception of the Appalachian Mountains), all of Alabama, Mississippi, central Florida, and westward to Louisiana and eastern Texas. From there, northward to southeastern Missouri including Arkansas, eastern Oklahoma, parts of Tennessee, and extreme southwestern Kentucky. It occurs in lowlands and up to 450 m (1500 ft) altitude. It is a medium-sized deciduous tree, growing to 30 m (100 ft) tall with a trunk up to 1 m (3 ft) in diameter. Young trees have a smooth, brown bark that becomes gray-black with rough scaly ridges as the tree matures. The leaves are alternate, simple and tardily deciduous, only falling well into winter; they are 3-12 cm (1-5 in) long and 2-6 cm (1/2-2 in) broad, variable in shape, most commonly shaped like a spatula being broad and rounded at the top and narrow and wedged at the base. The margins vary usually being smooth to shallowly lobed, with a bristle at the apex and lobe tips. The tree is easy to identify by the leaves, which have a lobe that looks as if a drop of water is hanging from the end of the leaf. The top of each leaf is a dull green to bluish green and the bottom is a paler bluish-green. On the bottom portion of the leaves, rusty colored hairs run along the veins. The acorns are arranged singly or in pairs, 10-14 mm (1/3-1/2 in) long and broad, with a shallow cupule; they mature about 18 months after pollination in fall of second year.
Comments
Develops a rounded canopy; adapts to moist and wet sites; used as shade and street trees in the U.S. South; tends to self-sow; 1/2" acorns; leaves variable, to 4" x 2"; native to southeast and south central U.S., where it grows along streams