CHECK LIST OF FOREST TEEES 85 



NAMES IN USE 



Pin Oak (Mass., Conn., R. I., N. Y., Water Oak (R. I., 111.). 



Pa., Del., Va., Md., Ark., Mo., 111., Swamp Oak (Pa., Ohio). 



Wis., Iowa, Kans.). Water Spanish Oak (Ark.). 



Swamp Spanish Oak (Ark., Kans.). Red Oak (trade, in part). 



X Quercus richteri Baenitz. Hybrid. 



Range. — All that is now known of this oak is that it was found in cultivation 

 at Breslau, Silesia. (Trelease). 



Note on nomenclature. — Supposed to be a hybrid between Quercus palustria 

 Muenchhausen and Quercus borealis maxima (Marshall) Ashe. 



Quercus georgiana M. A. Curtis. Georgia Oak. 



Range. — Central Georgia (Stone Mountain, Little Stone Mountain, 9 miles 

 south of Stone Mountain, and other granite hills 12 to 18 miles eastward in 

 Dekalb County); also in Jackson, Polk, and Meriwether Counties). 



name in use 



Georgia Oak 



X Quercus sraallii Trelease. Hybrid. 



Range. — Central Georgia (Stone Mountain, Dekalb County). 



Note on nomenclature. — Formerly designated as Quercus georgianaXmaril- 

 andica Sargent. Supposed to be a hybrid between Quercus georgiana M. A. 

 Curtis and Quercus marilandica Muenchhausen. 



Quercus texana Buckley. Texas Red Oak. 



Range. — Central and western Texas to the Edwards Plateau. 



NAMES IN USE 



Red Oak (Tex., trade— in part). Spanish Oak (Tex.). 



Spotted Oak (Tex.) . Texas Red Oak. 



Quercus texana stellapila Sargent. Texas Red Oak. 



Range. — Southwestern Texas (Sproul's Ranch — above Fort Davis, Jeff Davis 

 County). 



name in use 



Texas Red Oak 



* Quercus shumardii Buckley. 64 Shumard Red Oak. 



Range. — Eastern Texas to Kansas, northern Missouri, Iowa (Fayette County), 

 southern Illinois, southern Indiana, western Ohio, southern Michigan (Jackson 

 County), and through the Gulf and South Atlantic States to North Carolina; 

 Maryland (Calvert County). 



Note on nomenclature. — Formerly designated as Quercus texana Sargent (in 

 part), not of Buckley. 



name in use 



Shumard Red Oak 



** Buckley (fide Sargent) described this tree under its present name in 1860, and in 1881 as Quercus rubra 

 var. texana. It is a larger tree similar in its usually larger leaves to those of Quercus texana Buckley and in 

 Its acorns to Quercus borealis Michaux (= Quercus rubra of authors, not Quercus rubra Linnaeus). 



