Description:
This tree is
40-80' tall at maturity, forming a single trunk about
1½-3' across and a crown of leafy branches. Young trees
have somewhat pyramidal crowns, while older trees have more
open crowns that are more or less ovoid. Upper branches are ascending,
while lower branches are widely spreading or slightly drooping. Trunk
bark of mature trees is gray to brown, rough-textured, and narrowly
furrowed with scaly ridges. Branch bark is gray and more smooth, while
twigs are brown and glabrous with scattered lenticels. Alternate
leaves occur along the twigs and young shoots; they tend to be more
common near the tips of twigs and shoots. Individual leaf blades are
3-6" long and ¾-2" across; they are oblong-elliptic to broadly
oblong-elliptic in
shape and smooth along their margins. At the tip of each leaf blade,
there is either a tiny bristle or the scar of a detached bristle. The
upper surface of the leaf blades is dark green, hairless, and glossy,
while the lower surface is dull gray-green and sparsely canescent to
densely short-pubescent. The texture of the leaf blades is somewhat
stiff and
leathery. The petioles are ½-¾" long, yellowish white to light green,
and glabrous to short-pubescent.
Shingle Oak is monoecious, producing
separate male (staminate) and female (pistillate) flowers on the same
tree. Male flowers are produced in drooping yellowish catkins about 3"
long. Each male flower is less than 1/8" (3 mm.) across, consisting of
an
irregularly lobed calyx and several stamens. Female flowers occur near
the tips of twigs as the vernal leaves unfold; either short
clusters of 2-4 female flowers or individual female flowers are
produced. Each female flower is less than ¼" long, greenish red, and
ovoid in shape, consisting of an ovary, a calyx that surrounds the
ovary, and 3 stigmata at the apex. Underneath each female flower, there
are scale-like bractlets with downy hairs. The blooming period occurs
during mid- to late spring for about 2 weeks; the flowers are
cross-pollinated by wind. Afterwards, fertile female flowers are
replaced by acorns that take 2 years to develop; they become mature
during the autumn of the second year. Acorns usually occur along the
twigs either individually or in clusters of 2; they have short
woody pedicels. Mature acorns are about 10-15 mm. long and a
little less across, consisting of a light brown cup and a brown nut.
Each cup extends about one-third the length of an acorn. The meat of
the acorn is bitter. The root system consists of a taproot with
spreading lateral roots.
Cultivation: This tree prefers full or
partial sun and moist to dry conditions; it adapts to many soil types,
including those that contain loam, clay-loam, sand, and some rocky
material. Good
drainage is required. To a greater extent than other oak trees (
Quercus
spp.), the appearance of Shingle Oak is often marred by
gall-making insects.
Range
& Habitat: The native Shingle Oak is common in all
areas
of Illinois, except the NW section of the state, where it is largely
absent (see
Distribution
Map). Illinois lies along the NW range-limit
of this tree. Habitats consist of upland woodlands, well-drained areas
of floodplain woodlands, wooded slopes and edges of bluffs, tall
riverbanks, edges of limestone glades, sandstone cliffs, and fence
rows. In addition to these habitats, Shingle Oak is occasionally
cultivated as a landscape tree.
Faunal
Associations: Various insects feed on Shingle Oak and
other oaks; these
insects feed on the foliage, suck plant juices, consume the meat of
acorns, and bore through the wood or roots. The following leafhoppers
prefer Shingle Oak as a host plant:
Eratoneura alicia,
Eratoneura
amethica,
Eratoneura
arpegia,
Eratoneura
confirmata,
Eratoneura
econa,
Eratoneura imbricariae,
Eratoneura metopia,
and
Eratoneura
trivittata
(see Dmitriev & Dietrich, 2010). Other insects that have been
observed to feed on Shingle Oak include the leaf-mining larvae of the
moths
Coptotriche
castaneaeella,
Coptotriche
citrinipennella, and
Phyllonorycter
basistrigella. More generally, other insects that feed
on oaks (
Quercus spp.)
include the caterpillars of some Hairstreak butterflies and
Duskywing skippers, the caterpillars of other moths, aphids,
treehoppers, plant
bugs, lace bugs, leaf beetles and their larvae, the larvae of weevils,
the larvae of wood-boring beetles, the larvae of gall wasps, the larvae
of sawflies, grasshoppers, and walkingsticks. The
Moth Table,
Wood-Boring Beetle
Table, and
Insect Table list
these species more
specifically. The acorns of oaks are eaten by many birds and mammals.
Such birds as the Wild Turkey, Bobwhite, Blue Jay, White-Breasted
Nuthatch, Tufted Titmouse, and others eat acorns. Among mammals, the
Black Bear, Opossum, Raccoon, Southern Flying Squirrel, Gray Squirrel,
Fox Squirrel, Red Squirrel, Eastern Chipmunk, White-Footed Mouse, and
White-Tailed Deer eat acorns. White-Tailed Deer also browse on the
twigs and foliage. Cavities in older oak trees provide dens
for many mammals and cavity-nesting birds; other birds build nests
along the leafy branches. Such insectivorous birds as warblers,
thrushes, vireos, and flycatchers are often found in oaks because of
the large number of insects and other invertebrates that these trees
attract. In general, the value of Shingle Oak and other oaks to
wildlife is quite high.
Photographic
Location: An upland area of Busey Woods in Urbana,
Illinois.
Comments:
Shingle Oak
is one of two oaks (
Quercus
spp.) in Illinois that has
leaves with smooth margins; other oaks have pinnatifid leaves. The
other oak species with smooth-margined leaves,
Quercus phellos
(Willow
Oak), is found in southern Illinois. The leaves of Willow Oak are
more narrow (½" or less) than those of Shingle Oak. At one time, the
wood of Shingle Oak was used to make wooden shingles for houses, hence
the common name. Other common names for this tree are Jack Oak and
Northern Laurel Oak.