White Oak

Quercus alba

Common Name(s): American White Oak, Eastern White Oak, Forked-leaf White Oak, Northern White Oak, Oaks, Quebec Oak, White Oak

This tree can be viewed at A015, C007, and C013

Phonetic Spelling
KWER-kus AL-ba


Description
The white oak is a large slow growing deciduous, hardwood tree in the beech (Fagaceae) family and can reach heights of 135 feet with an 80-foot spread but generally tops out at 80 to 100 feet. It is native to the eastern United States and is usually found in forested areas of dry slopes, valleys, and ravines. Young trees are typically pyramidal in form, but as the tree matures it has a rounded and broad crown. The distinct feature of this tree is its fingerlike lobed leaves with rounded tips and no bristles.

The genus name, Quercus, is the Latin name for oak trees. The epithet, alba, means white. This refers to the bark’s ash-gray bark color. The common name is a reference to the color of the finished wood, not the bark.

Their fall foliage color is dark reddish to brown. The male flowers are the showiest in long catkins and the female flowers are inconspicuous. The fruit is a 3/4- to 1-inch-long brown acorn with a lumpy cap.

The white oak prefers full sun to partial shade in coarse, deep, moist, well-drained, loamy, slightly acidic soil but is adaptable to other soil types and is fairly drought tolerant once established. Wet sites should be avoided. The deep taproot makes it difficult to transplant. The tree is propagated by seeds.

Use white oak as a shade tree for large yards or parks, or in a naturalized area for wildlife to enjoy. It is suitable for butterfly, children’s, drought-tolerant, edible, native, nighttime, and pollinator gardens. However, it should not be planted near structures or pavement due to its eventual size. It is also toxic to horses.

This long-lived tree is a prolific supporter of wildlife for food and habitat. It supports a wide variety of butterflies and moths plus small mammals and songbirds. The acorns of white oak are edible (to humans) after tannins are leached or boiled out.

Quick ID Hints:

deciduous tree, pyramidal in youth, broad, rounded with age
light ashy gray scaly bark with vertical block and scales
the leaves are green, elliptic with rounded or fingerlike lobes without bristles
pinnately lobed leaves with entire margins, widest typically at the middle, glaucous on the undersides
male flowers prominent pendulous long yellowish-green chains arranged in clusters
reddish female flowers appear on stalks and are smaller and less showy
fruits are 3/4- to 1-inch-long acorns, initially green and ripen to tan, brown with a lumpy cap that covers 1/4 to 1/3 of the nut
Insects, Diseases, or Other Plant Problems: Numerous insect and disease pests, but the damage is rarely significant. The white oak is susceptible to oak wilt, anthracnose, cankers, leaf spots, powdery mildew, and oak leaf blister. Potential pests include scales, oak skeletonizers, leaf miners, aphids, galls, orange-striped oakworm, buck moth, whitemarked tussock moth, and lace bugs. Chlorosis can occur if the pH in the soil is too high, resulting in iron deficiency. White oak is sensitive to soil compaction and susceptible to wind damage. It can be messy.

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