Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Occasionally the swamp white oak is abundant in small areas.
When the memorial opens, 225 swamp white oak trees will have been planted around the site.
Another significant loss was a 120-year-old swamp white oak that was toppled along the Mall.
Hundreds of swamp white oak trees have been trucked in to provide a canopy over the memorial plaza.
The swamp white oak typically grows on hydromorphic soils.
In recent years, the swamp white oak has become a popular landscaping tree, partly due to its relative ease of transplanting.
Hundreds of swamp white oak trees dotting the surrounding plaza are intended to create a canopy that will dramatically change with the seasons.
Rooting of swamp white oak shoots was low, 1.4% for forced shoots and none from hedged trees.
The deciduous trees (swamp white oaks) are arranged in rows, forming informal clusters, clearings and groves.
Quercus bicolor, the swamp white oak, is a North American species of medium-sized trees in the beech family.
Last spring, the city planted the bare block with a mix of trees, including willow oaks, swamp white oaks and golden rain trees.
The chestnut oak is easily distinguished from the swamp white oak because that tree has whitened undersides on the leaves.
Quercus alba is sometimes confused with the swamp white oak, a closely related species, and the bur oak.
The main species are white oak, post oak, swamp white oak and chestnut oak.
Swamp white oak (Q. bicolor)
Others include black walnut, chinquapin oak, swamp white oak, tuliptree, red mulberry, blue ash, and sassafras.
The shallow root system of swamp white oak may best scavenge leaching nutrients from subsurface flow, thus reducing nonpoint source pollution.
Red oaks and pin oaks and swamp white oaks rained acorns on houses with no mortgage.
A number of tree species can be found along the trail, especially those which thrive in wet areas, including hackberry, elm, silver maple and swamp white oak.
Shortly after founding the botanic garden, Professor Beal established an arboretum on campus in 1874 which began as two rows of swamp white oaks.
It is a stone plaza peppered with 400 swamp white oak trees that surround two square waterfall-and-reflecting pools, which are located where the original towers once stood.
Below the escarpment are seasonally flooded forests dominated by silver maple, and green ash with swamp white oak, American bladdernut, and great water-leaf.
The river is bordered in many areas by extensive swamp forests of elm, ash, maple, pine, pin oak and swamp white oak.
Silver maple, elm, basswood, and ash dominate the forest; other trees include swamp white oak, cottonwood, willow, river birch, and hackberry.
In a change from the bare design Arad submitted, the waterfalls are nestled within a grove of swamp white oak trees that will grow as tall as 60 feet.
The larvae feed on Quercus species, including Quercus bicolor and Quercus ilicifolia.
The tree is a hybrid of Quercus robur f. fastigiata (Upright English oak) and Quercus bicolor (swamp white oak).
The hybrid oak Quercus x warei (Quercus robur f. fastigiata x Quercus bicolor), commonly known as the 'Long Oak', was named for him.
Quercus x warei (Quercus robur x Quercus bicolor) 'Nadler' (marketed in the United States under the trade name Kindred Spirit hybrid oak)
The larvae feed on Quercus alba, Quercus bicolor, Quercus montana, Quercus prinus, Quercus rubra and Quercus stellata.
Carvill's mark is still evident today in the pastoral landscape which includes several original trees including a Swamp white oak, Quercus bicolor, and Bur oak, Quercus macrocarpa, on Founders Green.