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    Florida 4-H Forest Ecology

    Florida 4-H Forest Ecology

    • florida4h.ifas.ufl.edu
    • Florida 4-H Forest Ecology
    • Forest Ecology Contest
    • Contest Stations
    • Trees of Florida
    • Turkey Oak
    • Identifying Characteristics

    Identifying Characteristics

    Size/Form: Turkey oak is a small tree that reaches 20 to 30 feet in height, rarely up to 60 feet, with a 2-foot diameter. It is characterized as having a broad open crown. It is often shrubby on the poorest sites.
    Leaves: Leaves are simple, alternate, and deciduous. The leaves, with 3 to 7 narrow lobes and deep sinuses, resemble a turkey foot. Each leaf, 3 to 12 inches long, possesses a small point at the tip. They are 3 to 12 inches long, 1 to 8 inches wide, oval or triangular in shape, are 3-7 lobed, and have sharply pointed tips. The terminal lobes are irregular and the apex is 3 toothed. Leaf bases are wedge-shaped. Leaves are lustrous yellow-green above, paler below, sometimes with rusty-red pubescence along the veins. Leaf petioles are short, stout, and grooved.
    Twigs: The twigs are stout and red, becoming dark brown and glabrous with age. The pith is star-shaped and homogeneous.
    Bark: The younger trees possess a dark to blackish bark that becomes thick, rough, and deeply furrowed into irregular ridges as the tree matures. The inner bark is red in color.
    Flowers: The flowers are monoecious and bloom in November.
    Fruit: Fruit is an acorn, usually grown solitary. The nut is ovoid, up to 1 inch long, brown, and woolly at the tip.
    Similar Trees on the Florida 4-H Forest Ecology Contest List:
    There are three other trees on our list that have simple, alternate, pinnately-lobed leaves.
    • Shumard oak
    • Southern red oak
    • White oak


    Section Topics

    • Habitat and Range
    • Wildlife Use
    • Human Use
    • Identifying Characteristics
    • Images
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    Florida 4-H Forest Ecology
    P.O. Box 110410 Gainesville, FL 32611-0410
    (352) 846-0547

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