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Willow Oak #2399







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Celebration: Planted in Celebration of John Perumal (2012)

John Perumal has a deep passion for plants and taught courses such as Plant Physiology and Plant Systematics at Southern Adventist University. With many years of experience living in the tropics, he brought his enthusiasm into the classroom. Dr. Perumal initiated the special tree-planting tradition and was the primary promoter of Earth Day on campus. He established strong connections with community organizations and advocated for creating an arboretum on campus.

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the town in Florida, see Willow Oak, Florida.

Quercus phellos, the willow oak, is a North American species of a deciduous tree in the red oak group of oaks. It is native to the south-central and eastern United States.

Description

It is a medium-sized tree growing to 20–30 meters (65–100 feet) tall (exceptionally to 39 m, 128 ft), with a trunk up to 1–1.5 m (3+1⁄2–5 ft) in diameter (exceptionally 2 m or 6+1⁄2 ft). It is distinguished from most other oaks by its leaves, which are shaped like willow leaves, 5–12 centimeters (2–4+3⁄4 inches) long and 1–2.5 cm (3⁄8–1 in) broad with an entire (untoothed and unlobed) margin; they are bright green above, paler beneath, usually hairless but sometimes downy beneath. The fruit is an acorn, 8–12 millimeters (5⁄1615⁄32 in) long, and almost as wide as long, with a shallow cup; it is one of the most prolific producers of acorns.[2] The tree starts acorn production around 15 years of age, earlier than many oak species.[3]

Willow oaks can grow moderately fast (height growth up to 60 cm or 2 ft a year), and tend to be conic to oblong when young, rounding out and gaining girth at maturity (i.e. more than 50 years).





 



Measurements


# Height Width Diameter at Breast Height (DBH) Measured On
1 49 cm | 19.3 in 2017-11-09

Collections

Collection Added On
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Family    
Genus    
Southern Arboretum 2023-09-29 12:11:18
Southern Celebration Trees 2023-09-29 12:11:20