Survival of nothern red oak acorns after fall burning. A comparison of leaf physiology and anatomy of Quercus (section Erythrobalanus-Fagaceae) species in different light environments. Single and repeated fires affect survival and regeneration of woody and herbaceous species in an oak-pine forest. Bur oak, Quercus macrocarpa beech family (Fagaceae). Long- and short-term flooding effects on survival and sink-source relationships of swamp-adapted tree species. Atlas of the flora of New England: Magnoliidae and Hamamelidae. Bartram oak in New Brunswick, New Jersey. A large swamp white oak of the lower Raritan flood plain. Growth of oak seedlings with specific ectomycorrhizae in urban stress environments. Recovery and utilization of tree extractives. Evolution of the chestnut tree and its blight. Chestnut blight: the classical problem of an introduced pathogen. The American chestnut: new hope for a fallen giant. Autumnal laef conductance and apparent photosythesis by saplings and sprouts in a recently disturbed northern hardwood forest. Germination characterisitics of bear oak. A supposed hybrid between the oak species Q. A progeny study of the so-called oak species Quercus saulii, with notes on other probable hybrids found in or near the District of Columbia. The hybrid oak, x Quercus rudkinii, at Arlington, Virginia. An analysis of seedling progeny of an individual of Quercus saulii compared with seedlings of a typical individual of the white oak ( Quercus alba) and a typical rock chesnut oak ( Quercus montana). Effects of acorn size on seedling survival and growth in Quercus rubra following simulated spring freeze. Latitudinal trends in acorn size in eastern North American species of Quercus. Acorn size and geographical range in the North American oaks. Floral sex ratios in scrub oak ( Quercus ilicifolia) vary with microtopography and stem height. The effect of low temperature on the germination and survival of native oaks. Phenological observations of nineteen native tree species in northeastern Minnesota. A decade of change in an old-growth beech-maple forest in Indiana. Relating wet and dry year ecophysiology to leaf structure in contrasting temperate tree species. Distribution, historical development and ecophysiological attributes of oak species in the eastern United States. Adaptations and responses to drought in Quercus species of North America. ![]() Gall-inducing insects provide insights into plant systematic relationships. ![]() Flowers and inflorescences of the "Amentiferae". Quercus Castanea Fagus References to Fagaceae
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