Scarlet Oak (Vt., Mass., R. I., Conn., 



CHECK LIST OF FOREST TEEES 



87 



NAMES IN USE 



N. C. 



Mich. 



X. Y.. N. J.. Pa., Md., Del. 

 Mo., 111., Ind.. Wis., Minn. 

 Nebr., Iowa, Ontario). 

 Red Oak (Kv., N. C, Ala., Wis., Nebr., 



Minn.). 



Black Oak (Mo., 111., Iowa, Wis.). 

 Spanish Oak (X. C, Southern States). 

 Span Oak (Md.). 

 Buck Oak (Tenn.). 

 Bastard Oak (Va.). 

 Spotted Oak (Tenn., Ky.). 



Quercus coccinea tuberculata Sargent. 68 



Range. — Massachusetts to Georgia; Alabama (vicinity of 

 Countv). 



NAME IN USE 



Scarlet Oak 



Scarlet Oak. 

 Berlin, Dallas 



Hybrid, 



X Quercus benderi Baenitz. 



Range.— Known only from a tree found in Massachusetts (vicinity of Boston- 

 Blue Hills Reservation). ,,,.,, ^ 



Xote on nomenclature.— Supposed to be a hybrid between Quercus coccinea 

 Muenchhausen and Ouercus borealis maxima (Marshall) Ashe. 



Hybrid. 



Range.— Massachusetts (near North Easton, Bristol County). 

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

 Muenchhausen and Quercus ilicifolia Wangenheim. 



X Quercus robbinsii Trelease. 



♦Quercus velutina La Marck. Black Oak. 



r ANG e.— From southern Maine (coast) to northern Vermont, southern and 

 western Ontario, southern Michigan, Iowa, southeastern Nebraska; south to 

 western Florida, and west to eastern Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and eastern 

 Texas (Brazos River). 



names in use 



Black Oak (Vt.. Mass.. R. I., N. Y.. 

 N. J., Pa., Del., Md., Va., W. Va., 

 N. C, S. C, Ga., Ala.. Fla., Miss., 

 La., Tex., Ohio, 111., Iowa, Kans., 

 Mo., Nebr., Mich., Wis., Minn., 

 Ontario) . 



Quercitron Oak (Del., S. C, La., Kans., 

 Minn.). 



Yellow Oak (R. I., N. Y., 111., Tex., 

 Kans., Minn.). 



Tanbark Oak (111.). 



Yellow-barked Oak (Minn.). 



Spotted Oak (Mo.). 



Yellow-bark (R. I.). 



Dver's Oak (Tex.). 



Black Jack (Ga.). 



Redbush (Ga.). 



Red Oak (N. C., Tenn., Ky., Ala. 



trade — in part). 

 Jack Oak (Iowa). 



La. 



Quercus velutina missouriensis Sargent. 6: 



Black Oak. 



Range. — Western Missouri to northwestern and southwestern Arkansas and 

 Oklahoma (Rich Mountain). 



NAME in use 



Black Oak 



Quercus leiodermis Ashe. 



Smooth-bark Oak 



Range.— Missouri (Hills south of Kansas City); possibly also extending into 

 northwestern Illinois. 



« Distinguished from the species hy its larger acorns, the cup scales of which are much thickened below 

 the middle of the cup. while the thin upper row of scales forms a distinct marginal ring Otherwise similar 

 to the species (Sargent). Known now in Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Alabama, and Missouri. 



«C. S. Sargent, Man. Trees of North Am., 239, ed. 1, 1905. Mature leaves stellate-pubescent above 

 Mid rusty-pubescent below and on the leaf stems and season's twigs. 



