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Pin Oak

Quercus palustris Münchh.

Associations

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In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Foodplant / feeds on
gregarious, crowded pycnidium of Macrophoma coelomycetous anamorph of Macrophoma nitens feeds on leaf of Quercus palustris

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Comments

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Quercus palustris is especially common in landscape and street plantings. Its persistent dead branchlets (pins) and branching pattern (drooping lower branches, horizontal middle branches, ascending upper branches) are quite distinctive.

This species reportedly hybridizes with Quercus coccinea (E. J. Palmer 1948) and with Q . imbricaria (= Q . × exacta Trelease), Q . marilandica , Q . nigra , Q . phellos (= Q . × schochiana Dieck), Q . rubra , Q . shumardii , and Q . velutina .

Some Native American tribes used infusions prepared from the bark of Quercus palustris to alleviate intestinal pains (D. E. Moerman 1986).

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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
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Flora of North America Vol. 3 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
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Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Description

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Trees to 25 m tall, deciduous. Branchlets brown, glabrous. Petiole 2.5-5 cm, glabrescent; leaf blade ovate to elliptic, 10-20 × 7-10 cm, abaxially greenish and glabrous or floccose, adaxially dark green, base cuneate, margin with 5-7 lobes on each side ending in 10-30 awns, apex acuminate. Female inflorescence ca. 1 cm; cupules solitary or 2 or 3. Cupule cupular, 1-1.2 × 1.5-1.8 cm, enclosing 1/4-1/3 of nut; bracts triangular, crowded, glabrous. Nut brownish, narrowly ellipsoid, 2-2.5 × ca. 1.5 cm, pubescent, glabrescent, apex rounded; scar flat or slightly impressed; stylopodium present. Fl. Apr-May, fr. Sep of following year.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of China Vol. 4: 375 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
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Flora of China @ eFloras.org
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Wu Zhengyi, Peter H. Raven & Hong Deyuan
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Description

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Trees , deciduous, to 25 m. Bark grayish brown, fissures broad, shallow, inner bark pinkish. Twigs reddish brown, 1.5-3(-4) mm diam., soon becoming glabrous. Terminal buds brown to reddish brown, ovoid, 3-5 mm, glabrous or with a few fine hairs at apex. Leaves: petiole 20-60 mm, glabrous. Leaf blade elliptic to oblong, 50-160 × 50-120 mm, base cuneate to broadly obtuse or truncate with basal pair of lobes often somewhat recurved, margins with 5-7 lobes and 10-30 awns, lobes acute or attenuate or distally expanded, apex acute to acuminate; surfaces abaxially glabrous except for conspicuous axillary tufts of tomentum, veins raised, adaxially planar, glabrous. Acorns biennial; cup thin, saucer-shaped, 3-6 mm high × 9.5-16 mm wide, covering 1/4 nut, outer surface glabrous or puberulent, inner surface glabrous or with a few hairs around scar, scale tips tightly appressed, acute to obtuse; nut globose or ovoid, 10-16 × 9-15 mm, often conspicuously striate, glabrous, scar diam. 5.5-9 mm. 2 n = 24.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of North America Vol. 3 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Flora of North America Editorial Committee
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eFloras.org
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Distribution

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Ont.; Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., Md., Mass., Mich., Mo., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Pa., R.I., Tenn., Va., W.Va., Wis.
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of North America Vol. 3 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Flora of North America Editorial Committee
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eFloras.org
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eFloras

Flowering/Fruiting

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Flowering spring.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of North America Vol. 3 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
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Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
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Flora of North America Editorial Committee
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eFloras.org
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Habitat

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Bottoms and poorly drained upland clay soils; 0-350m.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of North America Vol. 3 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of North America @ eFloras.org
editor
Flora of North America Editorial Committee
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eFloras.org
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Habitat & Distribution

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Cultivated. Beijing Shi, Liaoning, Shandong [native to North America]
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of China Vol. 4: 375 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of China @ eFloras.org
editor
Wu Zhengyi, Peter H. Raven & Hong Deyuan
project
eFloras.org
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eFloras

Common Names

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the term: swamp

pin oak
swamp oak
water oak
swamp Spanish oak
Spanish oak
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Description

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: monoecious, tree

Pin oak is a fast-growing, native, deciduous, monoecious tree. It is
physiologically mature at 80 to 100 years. Little is known of its
maximum age, but one old growth stand averaged 138 years of age. On
good sites, pin oak may reach 120 feet (37 m) in height and 60 inches
(150 cm) in d.b.h. [19], but the tree is usually 60 to 80 feet (18-24 m)
tall at maturity [22,25]. Acorns are 0.5 inches (1.3 cm) or less in
length, the smallest of the tree oaks [11].

An open-grown pin oak has a well-defined main trunk through most of the
wide, symmetrical crown. The upper branches are ascending, the middle
branches horizontal, and the lower branches inclined downward to give
pin oak a distinctive pyramidal shape. Lower branches remain alive on
open-grown trees. The branches die in closed stands, but are retained
for many years [19]. There are numerous small stiff branches on the
trunk and larger limbs [11].

Seedlings develop a strong taproot in well-aerated soils. As trees
become older, the root system becomes more fibrous [19].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Distribution

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
Pin oak occurs primarily along major rivers and on glacial till plains
in the north-central and eastern United States. It is distributed from
southwestern New England; west to extreme southern Ontario, southern
Michigan, northern Illinois, and Iowa; south to Missouri, east Kansas,
and northeastern Oklahoma; and east to central Arkansas, Tennessee,
central North Carolina, and Virginia [19].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Fire Ecology

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: fire regime, root collar

Pin oak is susceptible to fire due to its relatively thin bark. If
top-killed by fire, pin oak sprouts from the root collar [19]. Although
fire is infrequent in pin oak communities during the spring and early
summer because of wet conditions, surface fires may occur in the fall
and winter, especially during drought years [23,25].

FIRE REGIMES :
Find fire regime information for the plant communities in which this
species may occur by entering the species name in the FEIS home page under
"Find FIRE REGIMES".
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Fire Management Considerations

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More info for the term: hardwood

Fire should not be used as a management tool in bottomland hardwood
forests because of the susceptibility to fire of most bottomland
species [20].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Growth Form (according to Raunkiær Life-form classification)

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More info on this topic.

More info for the term: phanerophyte

Phanerophyte
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Habitat characteristics

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: herbaceous, shrubs, swamp, tree

Pin oak occurs primarily on bottomland sites that usually flood
intermittently during the dormant season but not during the growing
season. These sites include clay flats, depressions where water
accumulates in winter, and clay ridges of first bottoms. Pure or nearly
pure stands of pin oak grow on level or near level moist uplands such as
the glacial till plains of southwest Ohio, southern Illinois, southern
Indiana, and northern Missouri [8,19].

It grows on acidic, poorly drained, clay to clayey loam soils (Entisols
and Alfisols) [19].

Overstory associates not mentioned in Distribution and Occurrence
include swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor), willow oak, overcup oak (Q.
lyrata), bur oak (Q. macrocarpa), Nuttall oak (Q. nuttallii), swamp
chestnut oak (Q. michauxii), blackgum (Nyssa sylvatica), green ash,
slippery elm (Ulmus rubra), shellbark hickory (Carya laciniosa),
shagbark hickory (C. ovata), river birch (Betula nigra), Ohio buckeye
(Aesculus glabra), and American sycamore [8,19]. Shrubs and small tree
associates include American hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana), possumhaw
(Ilex decidua), and poison-ivy (Toxidendron radicans) [8]. The
herbaceous understory associates include sedges (Carex spp.), bedstraw
(Galium spp.), and skullcap (Scutellaria spp.) [5,25].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Habitat: Cover Types

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This species is known to occur in association with the following cover types (as classified by the Society of American Foresters):

39 Black ash - American elm - red maple
62 Silver maple - American elm
65 Pin oak - sweetgum
95 Black willow
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Habitat: Ecosystem

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This species is known to occur in the following ecosystem types (as named by the U.S. Forest Service in their Forest and Range Ecosystem [FRES] Type classification):

FRES16 Oak - gum - cypress
FRES17 Elm - ash - cottonwood
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Habitat: Plant Associations

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More info on this topic.

This species is known to occur in association with the following plant community types (as classified by Küchler 1964):

More info for the term: forest

K098 Northern floodplain forest
K101 Elm - ash forest
K113 Southern floodplain forest
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Immediate Effect of Fire

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: hardwood, top-kill

Light surface fires in bottomland hardwood stands readily top-kill pin
oak seedlings and saplings. Under more severe fire conditions,
sawtimber-sized trees may also be top-killed. Large trees often sustain
fire wounds [20,23,25].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Importance to Livestock and Wildlife

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Pin oak acorns are an important food for wildlife including white-tailed
deer, squirrels, wild turkeys, woodpeckers, bluejays, and waterfowl.
Acorns are an especially important food source for wood ducks and
mallards during fall migration [19]. Bottomland hardwoods that are
seasonally flooded provide nesting sites for colonial waterbirds and
many passerines [15]. Pin oak is an important species in greentree
reservoirs (artificially flooded areas) that attract and provide food
for migrating waterfowl [19,25].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Key Plant Community Associations

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: cover, cover type, hardwood

Pin oak is found in bottomland hardwood communities. There are four
variants of the SAF cover type pin oak-sweetgum (Liquidambar
styraciflua): white oak (Quercus alba)-pin oak-sweetgum, pin
oak-American elm (Ulmus americana), pin oak-red maple (Acer rubrum), and
pure pin oak [8]. Nearly pure even-aged stands of pin oak are known as
"pin oak flats" [19]. A pin oak-cherrybark oak (Quercus falcata var.
pagodifolia) community occurs in the Mississippi River Valley in
Illinois [25].

The following publication lists pin oak as a dominant species:

Forests of the Illinoian Till Plain of southwestern Ohio [5]
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Life Form

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More info for the term: tree

Tree
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Management considerations

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: basal area, forest, hardwood, seed, tree

Many bottomland hardwood forests were cleared for agriculture during the
settlement period. Currently, some of this land is being reforested to
provide wildlife habitat [1,3,21]. Pin oak is highly suited for direct
seeding. Information on seed collection, storage, sowing, site
preparation, and timing for bottomland hardwood reforestation is
detailed [1]. Pin oak acorns can be held in cold storage (35 to 40
degrees Fahrenheit [2-5 deg C]) with 90 percent viability for 2 years,
possible longer [21].

To provide habitat and food for wintering waterfowl, bottomland forests
composed of pin oak and other flood-tolerant, mast-producing species are
often impounded during the winter. The shallow water is drawn down in
the early spring to prevent tree damage. Twenty years of dormant-season
flooding did not damage pin oak, although stand basal area growth was
reduced 10 percent. After 25 years, however, some pin oaks had
developed bole swelling at or just above the flood water level. The
swelling caused fissures which provided entry for fungi [19]. Mature
pin oak survived only 3 years on permanently flooded land when water
levels were artificially raised by dams on the upper Mississippi River.
Pin oaks 2 feet (0.6 m) above the new pool level showed increased growth
rates during the 5 years after the rise in water level [10].

Pin oak can be harvested by clearcutting at 40-year intervals. Pin oak
grows rapidly on alluvial soils. One stand in Illinois averaged 62 feet
(18.9 m) in height and 12 inches (30.5 cm) in d.b.h. after only 35 years
[25].

Pin oak is susceptible to several oak diseases, including oak wilt
(Ceratocytis fagacearum), oak leaf blister (Taphrina caerulescens), pin
oak blight (Endothia gyrosa), and Dothiorella canker (Dothiorella
quercina). It is also susceptible to many insects, including
defoliators, wood borers, gall wasps, and weevils. Some of the more
important pests include gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar), obscure scale
(Melanaspis obscura), oak leaftier (Croesia semipurpurana), pin oak
sawfly (Caliroa lineata), scarlet oak sawfly (C. quercuscoccineae),
forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria), leaf roller (Argyrotaenia
quercifoliana), horned oak gall wasp (Callirhytis cornigera), and gouty
oak gall wasp (C. quercuspunctata) [19].

Pin oak leaves appear able to tolerate acid rain. Less than 1 percent
of the total leaf area was injured when trees were exposed to simulated
acid rain of pH 2.5 for 20 minutes each day for 10 days [7].

Leafed-out 2-year-old pin oak seedlings were exposed to salt solutions
for 5 weeks to mimic the impact of deicing salts. The seedlings had a
fairly high degree of foliar injury and high stem sodium and chloride
levels, but height growth and dry matter production were not affected by
the treatment [26].

Ornamental pin oaks planted on alkaline soils develop foliar chlorosis
because of nutrient deficiencies [19].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Nutritional Value

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
Pin oak acorns contain on average 15.4 percent crude fat, 45.4 percent
total carbohydrates, 3.8 percent total protein, 0.08 percent phosphorus,
0.04 percent calcium, and 0.06 percent magnesium [4].
license
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Occurrence in North America

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AR CT DE IL IN IA KS KY MD MA
MI MO NJ NY NC OH OK PA RI TN
VT VA WV ON
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Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Other uses and values

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the term: tree

Pin oak is widely planted as a shade tree and ornamental. It
transplants well and tolerates urban stresses such as street salt, acid
rain, and smoke [7,1,19,26]. Black ink can be made from twig galls on
pin oak [11].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Phenology

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Pin oak flowers in the spring about the same time as the leaves appear.
Acorns mature at the end of the second growing season and are dispersed
from September through early December [19].
license
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Plant Response to Fire

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More info for the term: root collar

Top-killed seedlings and young pin oak trees sprout from the root
collar. Fire wounds facilitate entry of decay-causing fungi [19,20].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Post-fire Regeneration

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Tree with adventitious-bud root crown/root sucker
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Regeneration Processes

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: adventitious, cover, forest, formation, litter, mast, root collar, seed, stratification, tree

Sexual reproduction: Seed production begins when the tree is about 20
years old, although open-grown trees may begin producing by 15 years.
Poor acorn crops occur in 3- to 4-year intervals. Dissemination is by
animals, primarily squirrels, mice, blue jays, and woodpeckers [19].
Over a 4-week period, blue jays transported and cached 54 percent of the
available pin oak acorn crop from a stand on the campus of Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg. The high
percentage may be skewed, however, because of the high number of
consumers per tree on a campus compared to a forest. The mean transport
distance between seed trees and caches was 0.7 mile (1.1 km), with a
range of 0.06 to 1.2 miles (0.1-1.9 km). Pin oak acorns fall within the
preferred size range [0.4 to 0.7 inches (1.1-1.7 cm) in diameter] of
blue jays [6].

Pin oak acorns require a 30- to 40-day cold stratification period at 32
to 41 degrees Fahrenheit (0-5 deg C). Viability is high. Acorns
submerged in cold water for as long as 6 months were not damaged. A
thick waxy coating on the pericap restricts water absorption [19].

Seedling establishment is often high after a good acorn crop year. In a
study in southeast Missouri, there were an average of 3,500 seedlings
per acre (8,650/ha) following a high mast yield [19]. Pin oaks are most
likely to establish if the litter layer is 0.5 to 2 inches (1.3-5.1 cm)
deep. Pin oak germination and early establishment can occur under a
dense canopy, but seedlings will die after 2 to 3 years unless they are
released. In a study of pin oak regeneration in southern Illinois, 1-
to 2-year-old seedlings were more abundant under a closed canopy than in
an open stand where the ground cover was dense. Seedlings over 5 years
of age, however, were more abundant in the open stands [13].
Two-year-old pin oak seedlings subjected to three shade treatments
increased their shoot/root ratio by 26 percent with increasing shade, a
reaction typical of intolerant species [18].

In a study in southern Illinois, pin oak reproduction was most abundant
in mixed hard-hardwood communities composed of oaks (Quercus spp.) and
hickories (Carya spp.); low in mixed soft-hardwood communities composed
of silver maple (Acer saccharinum), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvania),
sweetgum, hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), and American sycamore
(Platanus occidentalis); low in eastern cottonwood (Populus
deltoides)-black willow (Salix nigra) communities; low in old fields;
and rare in newly formed land (i.e., exposed sand bars) [14].

Pin oak seedlings are classified as intermediate in tolerance to shallow
flooding during the growing season [12,19]. After 60 days of completely
saturated soils, pin oak seedlings averaging 8.2 inches (20.8 cm) in
height had no shoot mortality, sparse adventitious root formation, and
some mortality of secondary roots. Seedlings under saturated conditions
grew significantly (p less than 0.01) taller than the control seedlings [12]. In
another study, seedlings subjected to shallow flooding (leaves and tops
exposed) during the growing season survived 84 days, but root growth
ceased, growth was poor, and recovery was slow. Seedlings survive only
10 to 20 days of complete inundation during the growing season. Pin oak
seedlings suffer no adverse effect from dormant season flooding [19].

Vegetative reproduction: Pin oak seedlings and young trees sprout
vigorously from the root collar if top-killed [19].
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bibliographic citation
Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Successional Status

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More info on this topic.

More info for the terms: codominant, swamp

Pin oak is intolerant of shade. It usually occurs as a dominant or
codominant in even-aged stands. Suppressed trees usually die within a
few years [19].

Pin oak occurs primarily in early successional stages of bottomland
forests. During drought or as the surface drainage in swamps and
sloughs improves, pin oak invades and replaces the first pioneer trees
such as black willow, eastern cottonwood, blackgum, swamp privet
(Forestiera acuminata), and buttonbush (Cephalanthus spp.). With
further surface drainage, pin oak communities are succeeded by white
oak, cherrybark oak, red maple, American elm, sweetgum, and hickory
[5,8,14,25]. Pin oak communities may be edaphic climaxes on heavy wet
soils because they produce abundant regeneration which, if released,
grows faster on these sites than competing species [8,19].
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Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Taxonomy

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The currently accepted scientific name of pin oak is Quercus palustris
Muenchh. [16]. It has been placed within the subgenus Erythrobalanus, or
red (black) oak group [22]. There are no recognized varieties,
subspecies, or forms. Pin oak hybridizes with the following species
[16,19]:

x Q. coccinea (scarlet oak)
x Q. imbricaria (shingle oak): Q. X exacta Trel.
x Q. phellos (willow oak): Q. X schochiana Dieck
x Q. rubra (northern red oak): Q. X columnaris Laughlin
x Q. shumardii (Shumard oak): Q. X mutabilis Palmer & Steyerm.
x Q. velutina (black oak): Q. X vaga Palmer & Steyerm.
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Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Value for rehabilitation of disturbed sites

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Pin oak is recommended for graded/top-soiled mine spoils. In southern
Illinois, pin oak seedlings (both planted and direct seeded) had among
the best survival and growth of nine oak species tested on graded cast
overburden covered with about 16 inches (40 cm) of eroded old field
surface soil [2]. Pin oak has naturally established on surface-mined
lands in Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma [28].
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Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Wood Products Value

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More info for the term: fuel

Pin oak does not self-prune, so the wood has many small knots which
reduce its quality and utility. The hard, heavy wood is used locally
for construction timbers, mine props, and fuel [19,23].
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Carey, Jennifer 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). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/

Associated Forest Cover

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Pin oak is a major species in only one forest cover type, Pin Oak-Sweetgum (Society of American Foresters Type 65), which is found on bottom lands and some upland sites throughout the central portion of the pin oak range (8). Associated species in this type include red maple (Acer rubrum), American elm (Ulmus americana), black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica), swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor), willow oak (Q. phellos), overcup oak (Q. lyrata), bur oak (Q. macrocarpa), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), Nuttall oak (Quercus nuttallii), swamp chestnut oak (Q. michauxii), and shellbark (Carya laciniosa) and shagbark (C. ovata) hickories. Pin oak and sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua) vary in their relative proportions in this cover type, and large areas of almost pure pin oak occur on the "pin oak flats" of the upland glacial till plains or in the bottom lands of the lower Ohio and central Mississippi River valleys.

Pin oak is an associated species in Silver Maple-American Elm (Type 62) in the bottom lands along the Ohio, Wabash, Mississippi, and Missouri Rivers; a variant of this type, silver maple-American elm-pin oak-sweetgum, is found along major streams in southern Illinois and Indiana.

Pin oak also occurs in Black Ash-American Elm-Red Maple (Type 39) in poorly drained bottom lands in northern Ohio and Indiana along with silver maple (Acer saccharinum), swamp white oak, sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), black tupelo, and eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides).

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Climate

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The climate throughout most of the range of pin oak is classified as humid or, in the northwestern portion, moist subhumid. Precipitation varies from 810 mm (32 in) along the western and northern edges of the pin oak range to more than 1270 mm (50 in) in Arkansas and Tennessee. Mean annual temperatures and growing season lengths range from 10° C (50° F) and 120 days in southern New England to 16° C (60° F) and more than 210 days in northern Arkansas and western Tennessee (16).

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Damaging Agents

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Although pin oak is very tolerant of dormant-season flooding, it is much less tolerant of growing-season flooding and trees may be injured or killed by intermittent growing-season flooding over several successive years. The trees can usually survive one growing season of continuous flooding but will be killed by continuous flooding over 2 or 3 consecutive years (2,4,10,22). Pin oak is rated as "intermediately tolerant" to growing season flooding, along with such species as sugar maple (Acer saccharum), river birch (Betula nigra), southern red oak (Quercus falcata), and Shumard oak (Q. shumardii); it is less tolerant than red maple, silver maple, sweetgum, sycamore, swamp white oak, and American elm (tolerant) and eastern cottonwood, green ash, and black willow (very tolerant) (28,29).

Dormant-season flooding for 20 years in a greentree reservoir in southeastern Missouri did not appear to damage pin oak trees, but did reduce stand basal area growth by 10 percent (26). However, in this same area approximately 5 years later (i.e., after 25 years of flooding), many, of these trees had developed bole swellings at and just above the average flood water level. These swellings caused longitudinal fissures in the bark up to 10 cm (4 in) wide, thereby exposing the bole xylem to decay organisms. The cause of this phenomenon is unknown, but it appears to be associated with the continuous dormant-season flooding, because pin oaks in adjacent areas subject only to intermittent natural flooding were not similarly affected (27).

The bark of pin oak is relatively thin and the species is therefore especially susceptible to damage by fire and the decay associated with fire wounds (12,22).

Pin oak is subject to most of the diseases of oaks including oak wilt (Ceratocystis fagacearum) and is particularly susceptible to a leaf blister fungus (Taphrina caerulescens), a shoot-blight and twig canker fungus (Dothiorella quercina), and pin oak blight (Endothia gyrosa) (12).

Pin oak is also host to many of the common oak-feeding insects including many defoliators, wood borers, gall wasps, and acorn weevils. Pin oak is classified as a "most preferred" host for gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) (15), and is also especially susceptible to the obscure scale (Melanaspis obscura), oak leaftier (Croesia semipurpurana), pin oak sawfly (Caliroa lineata), scarlet oak sawfly (C. quercuscoccineae), the sawfly Calinoa petiolata, the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria), a leafroller (Argyrotaenia quercifoliana), the homed oak gall wasp (Callirhytis cornigera), and the gouty oak gall wasp (C. quercuspunctata). Thousands of acres of pin oak stands in southern Illinois have been severely damaged over the past 25 years by outbreaks of the horned oak gall wasp and the forest tent caterpillar (1,31,32,33).

Ornamental pin oaks planted on alkaline soils often develop foliar chlorosis (yellowing) which, if severe, can kill the tree. This chlorosis was previously thought to be a simple iron deficiency, but recent research has indicated that it is a more complex phenomenon involving reduced foliar concentrations of one or more of the micronutrients Fe, Mn, or Zn, often in association with increased foliar concentrations of one or more of the macronutrients P, K, or Mg. In most cases, this problem can be easily corrected by soil applications of sulfuric acid. Chlorosis is not a problem in natural stands of pin oak which occur on more acidic soils (20,21).

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Flowering and Fruiting

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Pin oak is monoecious; flowers appear at about the time the leaves develop in the spring. Staminate flowers are borne on aments that develop from buds formed in the leaf axils of the previous year, and pistillate flowers are borne on short stalks from the axils of current-year leaves. Pollination is by wind. Fruit is an acorn (nut) that matures at the end of the second growing season after flowering. Acorns are dispersed from September to early December (25).

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Genetics

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No races or genetically distinct populations have been defined within pin oak, but the existence of such populations has been suggested based on differences in flood tolerance and resistance to iron chlorosis (3,9).

Five hybrids of pin oak are recognized (17): Quercus x mutabilis Palmer & Steyerm. (Q. palustris x shumardii), Q. x vaga Palmer & Steyerm. (Q. palustris x velutina), Q. x schochiana Dieck (Q. palustris x phellos), Q. x columnaris Laughlin (Q. palustris x rubra), and an unnamed hybrid with Q. coccinea.

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Growth and Yield

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Pin oak grows rapidly. In well-stocked, even-aged bottomland stands in southeastern Missouri, pin oak crop trees averaged 28 cm (11 in) in d.b.h. and 20 rn (65 ft) in height at age 30, and more than 40 cm (16 in) in d.b.h. at age 50. On good bottomland sites, stands normally reach heights of 24 to 27 m (80 to 90 ft) and diameters of approximately 60 cm (24 in) by 75 years, and individual trees may eventually attain heights of 37 m (120 ft) and diameters of 150 cm (60 in) (22,26).

Pin oak responds rapidly to thinning. After release, pin oak crowns expand quickly to occupy the additional growing space, and diameter growth increases rapidly. Net annual growth on plots thinned at age 37 in southern Illinois was 8.8 m³/ha (125 ft³/acre). At age 40 these stands had 42.0 m³/ha (3,000 fbm/acre) in trees 27 cm (10.6 in) in d.b.h. and larger and were growing at a rate of 4.2 m³ to 7.0 m³/ha (300 to 500 fbm/acre) per year. Typical 60- to 70-yearold bottomland pin oak stands yield 112 to 168 m³/ha (8,000 to 12,000 fbm/acre) of merchantable sawtimber. Growth of pin oaks on upland till-plain sites is much less than on bottom-land sites (22).

Pin oak is a short-lived species and reaches physiological maturity at 80 to 100 years. Little is known about maximum ages attained, but in one old-growth stand in Kentucky trees averaged 138 years of age (6,22).

Pin oak is strongly excurrent in growth form, and even open-grown trees maintain a well-defined main trunk through most of the crown. Trees grown in forest stands have narrow -crowns, but open-grown trees develop wide, symmetrical crowns in which the upper branches bend upward, the midcrown branches are horizontal, and the lower branches bend downward. This characteristic branching habit gives the tree a distinctive pyramidal shape.

Pin oak is not self-pruning. Many of the lower bole branches remain alive on open-grown trees, and although most of these branches die in closed stands, the dead branches are retained for many years. This characteristic causes many small "pin knots" in the lumber and gives the species its common name. (Some authorities ascribe the derivation of the common name to the prevalence of short, pinlike branches on the main lateral limbs (11)). Pruning removes these lower branches, but its benefit is partially offset by the subsequent development of new epicormic sprouts. Twelve years after the first 4.9-m (16-ft) log was pruned on 30-year-old trees in evenaged stands in southeastern Missouri, pruned trees have less than one-fourth as many branches as unpruned trees (6.1 compared to 25.6 branches) (18).

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Reaction to Competition

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Pin oak is classed as intolerant of shade. It is less tolerant than elm, boxelder (Acer negundo), sweetgum, hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), and ash but is more tolerant than eastern cottonwood and black willow. Pin oak usually grows in even-aged stands of dominant and codominant trees; intermediate and suppressed trees in such stands usually die within a few years of being overtopped. Single pin oaks in mixed stands usually are dominants. Pin oak is considered a subclimax species; it persists, however, on heavy, wet soils because it produces an abundance of reproduction which, if released, grows faster on these sites than most of its competitors (22,29).

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Rooting Habit

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In well-aerated soils, pin oak seedlings initially develop a strong taproot. As the trees become older, however, the root system loses this configuration and becomes more fibrous. When transplanted, bare-root seedlings and small saplings of pin oak quickly regenerate an extensive, fibrous root system (7,24).

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Seed Production and Dissemination

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Pin oak stands begin producing seed at about age 20, but open-grown trees may begin at ages as young as 15 years (22,25).

During a 14-year period, production of mature acorns in 32- to 46-year-old pin oak stands in southeastern Missouri averaged 210,300/ha (85,100/acre) but varied yearly from 13,300 to 492,700/ha (5,400 to 199,400/acre). Poor acorn crops occurred at 3- to 4-year intervals. Insect infestation rates varied inversely with crop size and, over all years, averaged 26 percent (19).

Pin oak acorns are dispersed by squirrels, mice, blue jays, and woodpeckers.

Pin oak acorns submerged in cold water as long as 6 months were not damaged. This tolerance may be partly due to a thick, waxy coating on the pericarp that impedes water absorption (5,23).

The acorns require stratification of 30 to 45 days at 0° to 5° C (32° to 41° F) to break dormancy, and germination of sound, stratified acorns averages about 68 percent (30).

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Seedling Development

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Germination is hypogeal (22). Pin oak seedlings established after good seed years are often abundant. In southeastern Missouri, an average of 8,650 new seedlings per hectare (3,500/acre) were present the summer following a good seed year. Seedling establishment rates were higher on areas that had been scarified the previous summer than on undisturbed areas. In an adjacent area that had been artificially flooded for 3 months during the winter, almost no new seedlings developed, partly because many of the acorns were consumed by thousands of migrating ducks attracted to the flooded area during the winter (23).

Although large numbers of seedlings can become established after good seed years, under fully stocked stands most die within 5 years because of their shade intolerance. Even under these conditions, however, a few individuals may live as long as 30 years, although they grow very slowly and frequently die back and resprout (22).

When established first-year seedlings are subjected to shallow flooding (tops and leaves above water) during the growing season, root growth ceases, some secondary roots die, and almost no adventitious roots are formed. Although growth during flooding is poor and recovery after flooding may be slow, seedling survival to such shallow flooding for as long as 84 days is high (7). Pin oak seedlings survive complete inundation (tops and leaves under water) for only 10 to 20 days during the growing season. They are classified as intermediate in tolerance to growing season shallow flooding along with cottonwood, sycamore, and silver maple; but they are less tolerant than water tupelo (Nyssa aquatica), green ash, and black willow (Salix nigra) (13,14). Neither shallow flooding nor complete inundation during the dormant season has an adverse effect on pin oak seedlings (4).

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Soils and Topography

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Pin oak grows primarily on level or nearly level, poorly drained alluvial floodplain and river bottom soils with high clay content (order Entisols). Pin oak is usually found on sites that flood intermittently during the dormant season but do not ordinarily flood during the growing season. It does not grow on the lowest, most poorly drained sites that may be covered with standing water through much of the growing season. It does grow extensively on poorly drained upland "pin oak flats" on the glacial till plains of southwestern Ohio, southern Illinois and Indiana, and northern Missouri (order Alfisols). Because of the level topography and presence of a claypan in the soil, these sites tend to be excessively wet in the winter and spring (22).

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Special Uses

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Pin oak acorns are an important food for mallards and wood ducks during their fall migration. Pin and other bottom-land oaks are the primary tree species in bottom-land duck-hunting areas (greentree reservoirs) that are artificially flooded during the fall and winter to attract migrating waterfowl (19). Pin oak acorns are also an important food for deer, squirrels, turkeys, woodpeckers, and blue jays.

The wood of pin oak is similar to that of northern red oak, and pin oak lumber is marketed under the general designation of "red oak." The occurrence of numerous small knots in the wood of many pin oak trees limits its use for high quality products, however (11).

Pin oak transplants well, and because of its rapid growth, large symmetrical crown, and scarlet fall colorations, it is commonly planted as a shade or ornamental tree (24).

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Vegetative Reproduction

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Pin oak sprouts vigorously from stumps of young trees, and, if the origin of the sprouts is low on the stump, the incidence of decay from the parent stump is low. After physiological die-back or injury to the top, young seedlings sprout readily from dormant buds on the stem or root collar (22).

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Distribution

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Pin oak grows from southwestern New England west to extreme southern Ontario, southern Michigan, northern Illinois, and Iowa; south to Missouri, eastern Kansas, and northeastern Oklahoma; then east to central Arkansas, Tennessee, central North Carolina, and Virginia (16).


-The native range of pin oak.


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Brief Summary

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Fagaceae -- Beech family

Robert A. McQuilkin

Pin oak (Quercus palustris), also called swamp oak, water oak, and swamp Spanish oak, is a fast-growing, moderately large tree found on bottom lands or moist uplands, often on poorly drained clay soils. Best development is in the Ohio Valley.

The wood is hard and heavy and is used in general construction and for firewood. Pin oak transplants well and is tolerant of the many stresses of the urban environment, so has become a favored tree for streets and landscapes.

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Quercus palustris

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Quercus palustris, the pin oak[4] or swamp Spanish oak, is a tree in the red oak section (Quercus sect. Lobatae) of the genus Quercus. Pin oak is one of the most commonly used landscaping oaks in its native range due to its ease of transplant, relatively fast growth, and pollution tolerance.[5]

Description

Largest known pin oak in New England, located in Northampton, Massachusetts. 2005 measurements: Height 32.9 metres (107.9 ft), circumference 5.3 metres (17.4 ft), average spread 29 metres (96 ft)

Quercus palustris is a medium-sized deciduous tree growing to 18–22 metres (59–72 feet) tall, with a trunk up to 1 m (3+12 ft) in diameter. It has an 8–14 m (26–46 ft) spread. A 10-year-old tree grown in full sun will be about 8 m (26 ft) tall. Young trees have a straight, columnar trunk with smooth bark and a pyramidal canopy.

By the time the tree is 40 years old, it develops more rough bark with a loose, spreading canopy. This canopy is considered one of the most distinctive features of the pin oak: the upper branches point upwards, the middle branches are at right angles to the trunk, and the lower branches droop downwards.[5][6]

The leaves are 5–16 centimetres (2–6+14 inches) long and 5–12 cm (2–4+34 in) broad, lobed, with five or seven lobes. Each lobe has five to seven bristle-tipped teeth. The sinuses are typically U-shaped and extremely deep cut. In fact, roughly the same amount of sinus area exists as actual leaf area. The leaf is mostly hairless, except for a very characteristic tuft of pale orange-brown down on the lower surface where each lobe vein joins the central vein. Overall autumn leaf coloration is generally bronze, though individual leaves may be red for a time, and is not considered particularly distinctive.[7] The acorns, borne in a shallow, thin cap, are hemispherical, 10–16 millimetres (133258 in) long and 9–15 mm (11321932 in) broad, green maturing pale brown about 18 months after pollination.[6] Unless processed using traditional methods, the acorn is unpalatable because the kernel is very bitter.

In its natural environment pin oak is a relatively short-lived, fast-growing pioneer or riparian species with a lifespan of approximately 120 years against many oaks which can live several centuries. Despite this there are many examples of pin oak that exceed this lifespan.[8] It develops a shallow, fibrous root system, unlike many oaks, which have a strong, deep taproot when young.[5]

A characteristic shared by a few other oak species, and also some beeches and hornbeams, is the retention of leaves through the winter on juvenile trees, a natural phenomenon referred to as marcescence. Young trees under 6 m (20 ft) are often covered with leaves year-round, though the leaves die in the fall, remaining attached to the shoots until the new leaves appear in the spring. As with many other oak species, dead pin oak branches stay on the tree for many years.[5][6]

Flowering and fruiting

Like all oaks, flowering and leaf-out occur in late spring when all frost danger has passed. The flowers are monoecious catkins which, being self-incompatible, require the presence of another oak for pollination. Any species in the red oak group can serve as a pollinator, but in pin oak's natural range, this will usually be northern red oak or scarlet oak. Interspecies hybridization occurs freely. The acorns require two growing seasons to develop.[6]

Name

The Latin specific epithet palustris means "of marshland" or "of swamps", referring to its natural habitat.[6][9]

The common name "pin oak" is possibly due to the many small, slender twigs, but may also be from the historical use of the hard wood for pins in wooden building construction.[10]

Distribution and habitat

Q. palustris is mainly distributed in the eastern and central United States from Connecticut west to eastern Kansas, and south to Georgia, west to eastern Oklahoma and Kansas.[11] It is also native in the extreme south of Ontario, Canada.

The pin oak is also well adapted to life in Australia (where it has been introduced), and is quite widespread across the Australian continent, especially in the cooler southern States such as Victoria and New South Wales. It is also well adapted to life in South Africa and Argentina, especially in the Río de la Plata region.

It is naturally a wetland tree,[5] confined to acidic soils, and does not tolerate limestone or sandy Florida soil, and grows at low altitudes from sea level up to 350 m (1,148 ft).[6][9]

It grows primarily on level or nearly level, poorly drained, alluvial floodplain and river-bottom soils with high clay content. They are usually found on sites that flood intermittently during the dormant season, but do not ordinarily flood during the growing season. They do not grow on the lowest, most poorly drained sites that may be covered with standing water through much of the growing season. However, they do grow extensively on poorly drained upland "pin oak flats" on the glacial till plains of southwestern Ohio, southern Illinois and Indiana, and northern Missouri. The level topography and presence of a claypan in the soil of these areas cause these sites to be excessively wet in winter and spring.[5]

Ecology

Associated forest cover

Pin oak is a major species in only one forest cover type, pin oak–sweetgum, which is found on bottom lands and some upland sites throughout the central portion of the pin oak range. Pin oak and sweetgum (Liquidambar styraciflua) vary in their relative proportions in this cover type. Large areas of almost pure pin oak occur on the "pin oak flats" of the upland glacial till plains or in the bottom lands of the lower Ohio and central Mississippi River valleys.[5] Associated species in this forest type include red maple (Acer rubrum), American elm (Ulmus americana), black tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica), swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor), willow oak (Quercus phellos), overcup oak (Quercus lyrata), bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa), green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica), Nuttall's oak (Quercus texana), swamp chestnut oak (Quercus michauxii), and shellbark (Carya laciniosa) and shagbark (Carya ovata) hickories.[5]

Pin oak is an associated species in silver maple–American elm forests in the bottom lands along the Ohio, Wabash, Mississippi, and Missouri Rivers. A variant of this type, silver maple–American elm–pin oak–sweetgum, is found along major streams in southern Illinois and Indiana.[5]

Pin oak also occurs in black ash–American elm–red maple forests in poorly drained bottom lands in northern Ohio and Indiana along with silver maple (Acer saccharinum), swamp white oak, sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), black tupelo, and eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides).[5]

Reaction to competition

Pin oak is classed as intolerant of shade. It is less tolerant than elm, boxelder (Acer negundo), sweetgum, hackberry (Celtis occidentalis), and ash, but is more tolerant than eastern cottonwood and black willow. Pin oak usually grows in even-aged stands of dominant and co-dominant trees. Intermediate and suppressed trees in such stands usually die within a few years of being overtopped. Single pin oaks in mixed stands usually are dominants. Pin oak is considered a subclimax species. It persists on heavy, wet soils because it produces an abundance of acorns which, if released, grow faster on these sites than most of its competitors.[5]

Damaging agents

Although pin oak is very tolerant of dormant-season flooding, it is much less tolerant of growing-season flooding. Trees may be injured or killed by intermittent growing-season flooding over several successive years. The trees can usually survive one growing season of continuous flooding, but will be killed by continuous flooding over 2 or 3 consecutive years. Pin oak is rated as "intermediately tolerant" to growing-season flooding. Also, since the bark of pin oak is relatively thin, the species is especially susceptible to damage by fire and decay associated with fire wounds.[5]

Associated species

Due to similarity in leaf shape, the pin oak is often confused with scarlet oak and black oak, and occasionally, red oak. However, it can be distinguished by its distinctive dead branches on the lower trunk ("pins"), and its uniquely shaped crown. The sinuses on pin oak leaves are also deeply cut, often covering just as much area as the leaf itself.

The pin oak is the only known food plant of Bucculatrix domicola caterpillars.

Uses

In its native range, pin oak is the most commonly used landscaping oak along with northern red oak due to its ease of transplant, relatively fast growth, and pollution tolerance. However, as it is naturally adapted to moist, acidic soils, it may develop a condition known as iron chlorosis on less suitable locations, causing the tree to shed leaves during the growing season and rot from the top down. Mature pin oaks are often too big to treat and this nutrient deficiency on alkaline soil may eventually kill them. The drooping lower branches can also be a problem, interfering with access for traffic and pedestrians.

It is also cultivated in parks and large gardens in the United Kingdom, and has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[12][13]

The wood is generally marketed as red oak, but is of significantly inferior quality, being somewhat weaker, often with many small knots.[5] The wood is hard and heavy and is used in general construction and for firewood. The bark was used by some Native American tribes to make a drink for treatment of intestinal pain.

References

  1. ^ Wenzell, K.; Kenny L.; Jerome, D. (2017). "Quercus palustris". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T194215A111279508.
  2. ^ Münchhausen, Otto von (1770). "Verzeichniß der Bäume und Stauden, welche in Deutschland fortkommen". Der Hausvater. Vol. 5. Hannover: Försters und Sohns Erben. pp. 253-254. Diagnosis in Latin, description in German in Teutonic script.
  3. ^ "Quercus palustris". World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew – via The Plant List. Note that this website has been superseded by World Flora Online
  4. ^ BSBI List 2007 (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m McQuilkin, Robert A. (1990). "Quercus palustris". In Burns, Russell M.; Honkala, Barbara H. (eds.). Hardwoods. Silvics of North America. Washington, D.C.: United States Forest Service (USFS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Vol. 2. Retrieved September 25, 2014 – via Southern Research Station.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Nixon, Kevin C. (1997). "Quercus palustris". In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (ed.). Flora of North America North of Mexico (FNA). Vol. 3. New York and Oxford – via eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA.
  7. ^ "Oak, Pin Quercus palustris", http://www.arborday.org/treeguide/TreeDetail.cfm?id=19
  8. ^ "The thickest, tallest, and oldest pin oak trees (Quercus palustris)". www.monumentaltrees.com. Retrieved 2021-09-08.
  9. ^ a b Harrison, Lorraine (2012). RHS Latin for Gardeners. United Kingdom: Mitchell Beazley. p. 224. ISBN 9781845337315.
  10. ^ Harlow, W. M. (1942). Trees of the Eastern and Central United States and Canada.
  11. ^ "Quercus palustris". County-level distribution map from the North American Plant Atlas (NAPA). Biota of North America Program (BONAP). 2014.
  12. ^ "Quercus palustris". Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  13. ^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 83. Retrieved 23 September 2018.

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Quercus palustris: Brief Summary

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Quercus palustris, the pin oak or swamp Spanish oak, is a tree in the red oak section (Quercus sect. Lobatae) of the genus Quercus. Pin oak is one of the most commonly used landscaping oaks in its native range due to its ease of transplant, relatively fast growth, and pollution tolerance.

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