Description:
This tree is 60-100' tall. In open situations, it develops
a short
stout trunk and a globoid to subgloboid crown with widely spreading
lower branches and ascending upper branches. In forested situations, it
develops a long straight trunk and an ovoid crown with ascending
branches. Trunk bark is light gray, shallowly furrowed, and divided
into flat narrow plates. Branch bark is light gray and more
smooth,
while twigs are yellowish brown to purplish brown and glabrous with
scattered white lenticels (air pores). Young shoots are light green and
pubescent. Alternate leaves occur along the twigs and young shoots. New
leaves are pubescent, but they become hairless later. Mature leaves are
4-7" long and 2-4½" across; they are broadly elliptic or obovate in
outline and pinnatifid with 3-5 pairs of deep to medium lobes. The
lobes have round tips and round sinuses; sometimes a few small
secondary lobes are present. The upper surface of mature leaves is
medium green and glabrous, while the lower surface dull light green or
gray-green and hairless (or nearly so). The leaf bases are narrow and
wedge-shaped (cuneate). The petioles are ¼-¾" long, light green to
yellow, and glabrous. Because of the short petioles and their stiff
texture, the leaves are resistant to fluttering in the wind. Because
White Oak is monoecious, separate male (staminate) and female
(pistillate) flowers are produced on the same tree. Male flowers are
produced in greenish yellow catkins about 2-3½" long that develop near
the tips of last year's branches. Individual male flowers are 1/8" (3
mm.)
across or less, consisting of an irregularly lobed calyx and several
stamens. Greenish red female flowers are produced at the tips of new
shoots on very short peduncles (less than 1/8" or 3 mm. long).
Individual female
flowers are 1/8" (3 mm.) across or less, consisting of a pubescent
calyx that
surrounds an ovoid ovary with 3 stigmata. The blooming period occurs
from mid-
to late spring for about 1-2 weeks. The flowers are cross-pollinated by
the wind. Fertile female flowers are replaced by acorns that become
mature by the fall. Mature acorns are ½-1" long, consisting of a
shallow cap and a nut. The cap is light tan or light gray with
warty scales; it extends downward to about one-fourth the length of the
acorn. The nut exterior is greenish brown to light brown, ovoid in
shape, and glabrous, while the meat of the nut is white and usually
slightly bitter. The root system consists of a taproot and widely
spreading lateral roots. The deciduous leaves become reddish purple or
brown during the autumn; a few dead leaves may persist on the tree
during the winter.
Cultivation:
The preference is full or
partial sun, mesic to dry-mesic conditions, and deep loamy soil.
However, this oak also adapts to other kinds of soil, including those
that contain silt-loam, sandy loam, clay-loam, and gravelly or
rocky material. This slow-growing tree can live up to 600
years. Because of its long taproot, it is sometimes difficult to
transplant. Locations prone to flooding should be avoided.
Range
&
Habitat: The native White Oak is a common tree that is
found in every
county of Illinois (see
Distribution
Map). It is the state tree of
Illinois. Habitats include upland woodlands, well-drained areas of
bottomland woodlands, sandy woodlands, bluffs, wooded
slopes, savannas and sandy savannas, edges of limestone glades,
and high riverbanks above the flood zone. White Oak is found in wooded
areas of varying quality; sometimes it is a dominant or codominant
canopy tree. White Oak is slowly being replaced by more shade tolerant
trees, particularly Sugar Maple (
Acer
saccharum), because of the
suppression of fire, to which it is moderately resistant. White Oak is
also cultivated as a landscape tree and it is often found in city parks.
Faunal
Associations: Caterpillars of the butterflies
Calycopis cecrops
(Red-Banded Hairstreak),
Fixsenia
favonius ontario (Northern
Hairstreak),
Parrhasius
m-album (White-M Hairstreak),
Satyrium calanus
falacer (Banded Hairstreak), and
Satyrium liparops strigosum
(Striped
Hairstreak) feed on the foliage, as do caterpillars of the
skippers
Erynnis brizo
(Sleepy Duskywing) and
Erynnis
juvenalis
(Juvenal's Duskywing). Probably several hundred species of moth
caterpillars feed on the foliage and other parts of oaks. Moth
caterpillars that feed on White Oak include
Acronicta haesitata
(Hesitant Dagger Moth),
Catocala
ilia (Ilia Underwing),
Lambdina fervidaria
(Curve-Lined Looper),
Lymantria
dispar (Gypsy
Moth),
Valentina
glandulella (Acorn Moth), several
Cameraria spp.
(Blotch Leaf-Miners) and
Phyllonorycter
spp. (Tentiform Leaf-Miners),
and other moths (see the
Moth Table for a
more complete listing of species). Other insects
that feed on White Oak include the larvae of
Acraspis erinacei
(Hedge-Hog Gall Wasp) and other gall wasps, the larvae of
Arrhenodes
minutus (Oak Timberworm) and other wood-boring beetles
(see
Wood-Boring
Beetle Table), the leaf beetles
Cryptocephalus
guttulatus and
Lupraea
picta,
Stegophylla
quercicola and other aphids, many species of
treehoppers (see
Treehopper Table),
many species of leafhoppers (see
Leafhopper Table),
Asterolecanium
variolosum (Golden Oak Scale),
Corythucha arcuata
(Oak Lace Bug),
Lygocoris
quercalbae (Oak Plant Bug)
and other plant bugs, and
Diapheromera
femorata (Northern
Walkingstick). Because the acorns of White Oak are produced annually
and they are less bitter than those of the majority of oaks, they
are an important source of food for many birds and mammals. Such birds
as the Bobwhite, Ring-Necked Pheasant, Ruffed Grouse, Greater Prairie
Chicken, Crow, and Blue Jay eat the acorns, as do such mammals as the
Black Bear, Raccoon, Fox Squirrel, Gray Squirrel, Red Squirrel,
Southern Flying Squirrel, Eastern Chipmunk, White-Footed
Mouse, White-Tailed Deer, and wild hogs. White-Tailed Deer
also browse on the twigs and foliage of White Oak, while the Cottontail
Rabbit gnaws on the bark and twigs of saplings and seedlings during the
winter (Haugen, 1942). Some birds construct nests on the branches of
White Oak and other oaks, while other birds nest in the cavities of
older trees. Tree squirrels, bats, and raccoons also use the cavities
of older trees as dens.
Photographic
Location: Crystal Lake Park in Urbana, Illinois.
Comments:
White Oak is a very impressive tree at maturity with branches of
exceptional length and size. It can be distinguished from other oaks
(
Quercus spp.)
by its light gray bark with flat scaly ridges and
shallow furrows, by its moderately to deeply lobed leaves, by the
relatively even size of its lobes and their rounded tips, by the pale
green and hairless undersides of its leaves, and by its medium-large
acorns that have shallow warty cups without fringes. The highly
regarded wood of White Oak is heavy, strong, flexible, and durable. It
is used to make furniture, veneer, paneling, flooring, wooden barrels
(including those that store whiskey and wine), caskets, railroad ties,
fence posts, mine timbers, and wooden boats. It is also an excellent
source of
firewood.