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Quercus rubra
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==Description== In many forests, ''Quercus rubra'' grows straight and tall, to {{Convert|28|m|abbr=off}}, exceptionally to {{cvt|43|m|ft}} tall, with a trunk of up to {{Convert|50-100|cm|abbr=off}} in diameter. Open-grown trees do not get as tall, but can develop a stouter trunk, up to {{cvt|2|m|ft|frac=2}} in diameter. It has stout branches growing at right angles to the stem, forming a narrow round-topped head.<ref name="Keeler">{{cite book |last=Keeler |first=Harriet L. |url=https://archive.org/details/ournativetreesa02keelgoog |title=Our Native Trees and How to Identify Them |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons |year=1900 |location=New Roak |pages=[https://archive.org/details/ournativetreesa02keelgoog/page/n378 349]–354}}</ref> Under optimal conditions and full sun, northern red oak is fast growing and a 10-year-old tree can be {{cvt|5|–|6|m|ft}} tall.<ref>[http://www.arborday.org/trees/treeGuide/TreeDetail.cfm?id=20 Arbor Day Foundation, Northern Red Oak]</ref> Trees may live up to 400 years;<ref>[http://plants.usda.gov/plantguide/pdf/cs_quru.pdf United States Department of Agriculture Plant Guide]</ref> a living example of 326 years was noted in 2001.<ref name="FNA" /><ref name="people.eku.edu/pedersonn/OLDLISTeast">[http://people.eku.edu/pedersonn/OLDLISTeast Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory and Columbia University, Eastern US oldlist]</ref> Northern red oak is easy to recognize by its [[Bark (botany)|bark]], which features ridges that appear to have shiny stripes down the center. A few other oaks have bark with this kind of appearance in the upper tree, but the northern red oak is the only tree with the striping all the way down the trunk.<ref name="FNA" /> As with most other deciduous oaks, leafout takes place in spring when day length has reached 13 hours—it is tied entirely to [[photoperiod]] and will take place regardless of air temperature. As a consequence (see below), in cooler regions, northern red oaks often lose their flowers to late spring frosts, resulting in no seed crop for the year. The catkins and leaves emerge at the same time. The [[acorn]]s develop on the tree for two growing seasons and are released from the tree in early October, and leaf drop begins when day length falls under 11 hours. The timing of leafout and leaf drop can vary by as much as three weeks in the northern and southern US. Seedlings emerge in spring when soil temperatures reach {{cvt|21|C}}.{{citation needed|date=January 2020}} * Bark: Dark reddish gray brown, with broad, thin, rounded ridges, scaly. On young trees and large stems, smooth and light gray. Rich in tannin. Branchlets slender, at first bright green, shining, then dark red, finally dark brown. Bark is brownish gray, becoming dark brown on old trees. * Wood: Pale reddish brown, sapwood darker, heavy, hard, strong, coarse-grained. Cracks in drying, but when carefully treated could be successfully used for furniture. Also used in construction and for interior finish of houses. Sp. gr., 0.6621; weight of cu. ft., 41.25 lbs. * Winter buds: Dark chestnut brown (reddish brown), ovate, acute, generally {{cvt|6|mm|in|frac=16}} long<ref name="FNA" /> * [[File:Small oak branch.jpg|thumb|Leaves and acorns]]Leaves and acorns: Alternate, oblong-ovate to oblong, five to ten inches long, four to six inches broad; seven to eleven lobes tapering gradually from broad bases, acute, and usually repandly dentate and terminating with long bristle-pointed teeth; the second pair of lobes from apex are largest; midrib and primary veins conspicuous. Lobes are often less deeply cut than most other oaks of the red oak group. Leaves emerge from the bud convolute, pink, covered with soft silky down above, coated with thick white tomentum below. When full grown are dark green and smooth, sometimes shining above, yellow green, smooth or hairy on the axils of the veins below. In autumn they turn a rich red, sometimes brown. Often the petiole and midvein are a rich red color in midsummer and early autumn, though this is not true of all red oaks. The acorns mature in about 18 months after [[pollination]]; solitary or in pairs, sessile or stalked; nut oblong-ovoid with broad flat base, full, with acute apex, one half to one and one-fourth of an inch long, first green, maturing nut-brown; cup, saucer-shaped and shallow, {{cvt|2|cm|in|frac=4}} wide, usually covering only the base, sometimes one-fourth of the nut, thick, shallow, reddish brown, somewhat downy within, covered with thin imbricated reddish brown scales. Its kernel is white and very bitter.<ref name="Keeler" /> Red oak acorns, unlike the white oak group, display [[epigeal dormancy]] and will not germinate without a minimum of three months' exposure to temperatures below {{cvt|40|°F|°C|order=flip}}. They also take two years of growing on the tree before development is completed.<ref name="FNA">{{eFloras|1 |family=Fagaceae |first=Kevin C. |last=Nixon}}</ref> {{Gallery |2014-10-30 10 49 37 Red Oak foliage during autumn on Farrell Avenue in Ewing, New Jersey.JPG|Autumn foliage |Red Oak Quercus Rubra Bark Vertical High DoF.JPG|Detail of mature bark |Quercus_rubra_IP0905004.jpg|Sapling in Hohenlohe, Germany |A large northern red oak tree in Glen Abbey, Oakville, Ontario.jpg|An old-growth northern red oak during winter in Glen Abbey, [[Oakville, Ontario|Oakville]], [[Ontario]]. }}
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