Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Quercus pumila, the runner oak [4] or running oak, [5] is a species of oak. It is native to the southeastern United States (Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas). [4] [6] Quercus pumila is a deciduous shrub usually less than one meter (3 feet 3 inches) tall.
The genus Quercus contains about 500 known species, plus about 180 hybrids between them. [1] The genus, as is the case with many large genera, is divided into subgenera and sections. Traditionally, the genus Quercus was divided into the two subgenera Cyclobalanopsis, the ring-cupped oaks, and Quercus, which included
Castanea pumila: Allegheny chinkapin Fagaceae (beech family) Yes IUCN (LC) 422 Fagus: beeches; Fagus grandifolia: American beech Fagaceae (beech family) Yes IUCN (LC) 531 Quercus: oaks; Quercus alba: white oak Fagaceae (beech family) Yes IUCN (LC) 82 Quercus bicolor: swamp white oak Fagaceae (beech family) Yes 84 Quercus buckleyi: Texas red oak ...
The Soldiers Delight Natural Environmental Area is located in western Baltimore County, Maryland. [1] Much of the area of the Soldiers Delight NEA, which totals 1,900 acres (7.7 km 2) of protected land, contains a serpentine barren that contains a number of rare and endangered species of plants.
Quercus ilicifolia, commonly known as bear oak or scrub oak, is a small shrubby oak native to the Eastern United States and, less commonly, in southeastern Canada. Its range in the United States extends from Maine to North Carolina , with reports of a few populations north of the international frontier in Ontario . [ 3 ]
Quercus prinus var. pumila Michx. Quercus rufescens (Rehder) E.P.Bicknell Quercus prinoides , commonly known as dwarf chinkapin oak , dwarf chinquapin oak , dwarf chestnut oak or scrub chestnut oak , is a shrubby, clone-forming oak native to central-eastern North America .
Quercus muehlenbergii, the chinquapin (or chinkapin) oak, is a deciduous species of tree in the white oak group (Quercus sect. Quercus). The species was often called ...
The Northern Indochina subtropical forests occupy the highlands of northern Indochina, extending from northeastern Vietnam, where they cover the upper portion of the Red River watershed and the northern Annamite Range, across northern Laos, northernmost Thailand, and southeastern Yunnan to Shan State in eastern Myanmar.