Common Name: oak 
                        
                        
                            Type: Tree
                        
                        
                            Family: Fagaceae
                        
                        
                            Native Range: Central and eastern United States and Canada
                        
                        
                            Zone: 4 to 8
                        
                        
                            Height: 50.00 to 70.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Spread: 40.00 to 60.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Bloom Time: April to May
                        
                        
                            Bloom Description: Yellowish-green
                        
                        
                            Sun: Full sun
                        
                        
                            Water: Medium to wet
                        
                        
                            Maintenance: Low
                        
                        
                                Suggested Use: Shade Tree, Street Tree, Rain Garden
		                    
                                Flower: Insignificant
		                    
                                Leaf: Good Fall
		                    
                                Fruit: Showy
		                    
                                Tolerate: Erosion, Clay Soil, Wet Soil
		                    
                        
                        
                     
                    
                 
                                   
                
                    Culture
                    Best grown in moist, rich, humusy, medium to wet soils in full sun.  Tolerates some part shade but not full shade.  Adapts to a wide range of soil conditions ranging from soggy soils on the edge of swampy areas and river banks to much drier upland ones.
	             
                
                    Noteworthy Characteristics
                    Quercus × schuettei, commonly called Schuette’s oak, is a hybrid cross between Quercus macrocarpa (bur oak) and Quercus bicolor (swamp white oak).  It is a medium-sized deciduous oak of the white oak group that typically grows in a conical form to 40-60’ tall with the crown broadening and rounding with age.  It may be found in the wild as a naturally occurring hybrid scattered through locations where the ranges of the parent trees coincide (southern Ontario and Quebec south to Kentucky, Missouri and Oklahoma).   Glossy green leaves (slightly smaller than those of bur oak) have about 10 rounded lobes with deep center sinuses often extending nearly to the midrib. Fall color is a yellowish-brown, sometimes tinged with red.  Insignificant, monoecious, yellowish-green flowers in separate male and female catkins appear in spring as the leaves emerge.  Rounded acorns (to 1 1/2” long) are partially enclosed within scaly hairy beige cups that enclose about 1/2 to 3/4 of the acorn.  Acorns are abundant and an excellent source of food for wildlife.
Genus name comes from the classical Latin name for oak trees.
Specific epithet honors J.H. Schuette  (1821-1908) who discovered this hybrid growing in the wild in northern Wisconsin in the late 1800s.
	             
                
                    Problems
                    Schuette’s oak is considered to be a low-maintence tree with good pest resistance.  Oaks in general are susceptible to a large number of diseases, including oak wilt, chestnut blight, shoestring root rot, anthracnose, oak leaf blister, cankers, leaf spots and powdery mildew.  Potential insect pests include scale, oak skeletonizer, leaf miner, galls, oak lace bugs, borers, caterpillars and nut weevils.
	             
                
                    Uses
                    A medium shade tree for moist landscape areas.   Specimen or group.  Lawns or parks.  Street tree.   Well suited to soggy soils.  Riverbanks.