
Regional Champion Sawtooth Oak
Posted by:
QuesterMark
N 32° 44.123 W 097° 22.071
14S E 652930 N 3623129
This Sawtooth Oak, located in the Fort Worth Botanic Garden, was the Dallas-Fort Worth Regional Champion in 2004.
Waymark Code: WM636P
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/24/2009
Views: 8
?(data from the website below):
The form of the Sawtooth Oak is a small to medium-sized tree that forms a dense pyramidal crown that rounds with age.
It grows to heights of 40 to 50 feet with crown spreads of 50 to 60 feet.This tree grows at a fast growth rate.
The LEAVES are alternate, simple, lanceolate in shape, 3 to 7 inches long, pinnately veined with a very sharply serrate margin bearing bristle-tipped teeth.
The FLOWERS - Male catkins are golden and pendant, appearing in the spring; female catkins are borne on spikes.
The FRUIT, one inch acorns, are quite popular with wildlife. Sawtooth Oak acorns are at the top of the food preference list for wood ducks, pheasants, grackles, jays, nuthatches, thrushes, woodpeckers, rabbits, deer, foxes and squirrels.
The TWIGS are quite slender, red to gray-brown in color with multiple terminal buds. BUDS are gray-brown, pubescent on the bud scale edges and somewhat pyramidal.
The BARK is ridged and furrowed even when young, later deeply ridged and furrowed and corky.
Corrected coordinates courtesy of txoilgas.
Genus/Species: Quercus acutissima
 Height: 65
 Girth: 8
 Method of obtaining height: Reliable source
 Method of obtaining girth: Reliable source
 Location type: Other public property
 Website reference: [Web Link]
 Walk time: 6
 Age: Not Listed
 Historical significance: Not listed
 Planter: Not listed
 Parking coordinates: Not Listed
 Photograpy coordinates: Not Listed

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Visit Instructions:
A closeup picture of your GPS receiver in your hand, with the tree in the background, is required. If the tree is on private property, this closeup photograph with the tree in the background may be taken from the nearest public vantage point without actually going to the tree.
The required photograph does not need to show the entire tree, but the individual tree must be recognizable.