Madison County Garden Club

Madison County Garden Club MCGC is formed for charitable and educational purposes to promote best gardening practices.

12/01/2023
12/01/2023

Tomorrow evening, Tuesday, November 21st!
11/20/2023

Tomorrow evening, Tuesday, November 21st!

11/18/2023

Here are six native oaks you can find in the eastern United States. If you’ve read Doug Tallamy’s “The Nature of Oaks,” you know that native oaks are the most important host trees for butterfly and moth caterpillars in North America. In addition, if you like to watch or listen to songbirds, native oaks provide the caterpillar food source for baby birds better than any other tree group.

As with other trees, additional features like the habitat, buds, acorns, and bark are often necessary for confident identification. Many oaks hybridize between species as well, sometimes making identification to species challenging from just the leaves.

Swamp White Oak (Quercus bicolor) can be found in bottomland forests and wetland margins across the Midwest and Northeast. There are some scattered populations in the Piedmont, though, and it’s also used in landscaping. The ‘bicolor’ in its scientific/botanical name refers to the difference between the dark green and glossy top surface of its leaves and the much lighter, silvery-white undersides.

Post Oak (Quercus stellata) grows in upland forests with clay soils in the Southeast. The leaves have a diagnostic Maltese cross shape and many star-shaped hairs (trichomes) on their lower surface.

Overcup Oak (Quercus lyrata) grows in bottomland forests of the Coastal Plain and in the Gulf Coast states. You’ll occasionally find one growing in the Piedmont, but they’re planted in landscaping too. Overcup Oak leaves are widest above the midline and typically have 7 lobes. The best feature to identify them may be their acorn, which has a cup that nearly encloses the entire nut.

Chinquapin Oak (Quercus muehlenbergii) can be found in the Midwest but it is sometimes planted in landscaping. In the wild, it’s often found around limestone outcrops. It has some resemblance to Chestnut Oak, but the leaves of Chinquapin Oak have sharper teeth along the margins. Chinquapin Oak leaves are also much smaller, typically being less than 5 inches long.

Chestnut Oak (Quercus montana) grows in upland forests of the Appalachian Mountains and adjacent Piedmont. The leaves can be up to 10 inches long and they have many rounded teeth along their margins. The key difference from Swamp Chestnut Oak leaves is that Chestnut Oak leaves are proportionately narrower.

Swamp Chestnut Oak (Quercus michauxii) grows in bottomland forests of the Coastal Plain and Gulf Coast states, but scattered populations occur in the Piedmont too. Its leaves are much wider above the midline and it has lots of rounded teeth along the leaf margin. The leaves closely resemble Chestnut Oak (Q. montana). The key difference between them, though, is that Swamp Chestnut Oak has proportionally wider leaves. It also differs in habitat and distribution range from the Chestnut Oak. Its scientific name honors the French naturalist André Michaux, who was the Royal botanist of King Louis XVI and an early explorer of the southeastern United States.

, , ,

November newsletter is up!
11/14/2023

November newsletter is up!

Saturday Nov. 11, 11:00 am - 1:00 PM at the Asheville Botanical Garden, Tom Tribble from Audubon will talk on Bird-Frien...
11/10/2023

Saturday Nov. 11, 11:00 am - 1:00 PM at the Asheville Botanical Garden, Tom Tribble from Audubon will talk on Bird-Friendly Gardening, presented by the Land of the Sky Chapter of the North Carolina Native Plant Society.

Tom Tribble served six years as President and is now an At-Large Director of Blue Ridge Audubon Chapter, which covers Buncombe, Henderson, Madison and several adjacent counties in western North Carolina.

We are asking that you register so that we will have enough chairs set up but registration is not required.

Click here to register: https://northcarolinanativeplantsociety.wildapricot.org/event-5461957

Best regards, Land of the Sky Leadership Team

Address

258 Carolina Lane
Marshall, NC
28753

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Madison County Garden Club posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Madison County Garden Club:

Share