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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Quercus shumardii | Shumard Oak
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Quercus shumardii | Shumard Oak
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Shumard oak wood is close-grained, hard, strong, and heavy [45]. This wood is superior to that of other red oaks; it is marketed as "red oak", and is not distinguished commercially from red oak species. The wood is used for veneer, cabinets, furniture, flooring, interior trim, and lumber [11,45]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : In Texas, Shumard oak is preferred browse for white-tailed deer in Ashe juniper (Juniperus ashei) woodlands [3]. Shumard oak acorns are excellent food for wildlife; they are consumed by songbirds, wild turkeys, waterfowl, white-tailed deer, and various species of squirrels [11]. PALATABILITY : Shumard oak acorns were intermediate in palatability to fox squirrels when compared with those of eight other southern oaks [30]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : Nutritional values (percent dry weight) for Shumard oak acorns are as follows [8]: crude fat 9.8 total carbohydrates 29.3 total protein 3.8 phosphorus 0.06 calcium 0.27 magnesium 0.06 COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Shumard oak had one of the highest survival rates of nine oak species planted on minespoils in Illinois [4]. It exhibited outstanding growth on cast overburden in Illinois and Indiana [37]. In Mississippi, reforestation of agricultural lands to bottomland hardwoods was successful with direct-seeded Shumard oak (in addition to other species). Sites were seeded without preparation. Weeds were controlled on one site, where Shumard oak had better growth and survivorship than at the other sites [1]. Shumard oak seedlings have been planted successfully in reforestation projects on eroded ridgetops in Mississippi [14]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Shumard oak is planted as an ornamental [38]. Shumard oak acorns are bitter, but are edible if the tannins are leached out. They can be ground and used as flour, roasted and ground to make coffee, or eaten whole [12,22]. Native Americans had many uses for the bark and acorns of oaks, probably including Shumard oak [22]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Shumard oak can be successfully direct seeded or planted as seedlings [20,39]. Soil fertilization does not improve establishment success [39]. Height growth of direct-seeded Shumard oaks is slow compared to that of planted stock; growth rates are sufficient to achieve wildlife habitat management objectives but not for timber production [1]. Acorns with a moisture content below 20 to 30 percent are not likely to germinate [48]. Seed moisture for Shumard oaks can be measured by using microwave ovens [7]. Diseases of Shumard oak include oakleaf blister, oak wilt, and various wood rotting fungi (Fomes spp., Polyporus spp., and Stereum spp.) [11]. Insect defoliators that attack Shumard oak, but are not species specific, include June beetles, orange-striped oakworms, cankerworms, forest tent caterpillars, yellow-necked caterpillars, variable oakleaf caterpillars, and red-humped oakworms [11]. Shumard oak acorns are subject to attack by acorn weevils [26].

Related categories for Species: Quercus shumardii | Shumard Oak

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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