Scarlet, Q. coccinea Muenchh., Northern Red, Q. rubra L., and Shumard Oak, Q. shumardii Buckl., are difficult to distinguish. Northern red oak leaves have shallow sinuses and a dull-green upper surface with little or no pubescence in the vein axils on the underside. Shumard oak leaves have a glossier surface, shallow to deep sinuses that are usually wider than the adjacent lobes, and definite hairiness at the vein axils. The sinuses of scarlet oak are also usually wider than their adjacent lobes, which are usually toothed. Both Shumard and scarlet oak have outstanding fall coloration.
Blackjack Oak, Q. marilandica Muenchh., can be recognized by its leathery, usually entire, broadly obovate leaf, which has a rusty undersurface. The branches are stout, irregular, gnarled, drooping to horizontal.
Laurel Oak, Q. laurifolia Michx., and Water Oak, Q. nigra L., are similar in size and shape, but water oak has oblong-obovate or spatula-shaped leaves gradually narrowed to a wedge-shaped base. Laurel oak leaves are elliptic to oblong-ovate. Laurel oaks tend to shed leaves late and thus may retain about 30 to 50 percent of their lower leaves after water oaks are bare. Some recent authors separate the laurel oaks into two species, upland laurel oak, Q. hemisphaerica Bartr., and swamp laurel oak, Q. laurifolia Michx.
White Oak, Q. alba L., has a thin, light green leaf with a light glaucous bloom at maturity; it is oblong or ovate, with rounded lobes and three to five narrow sinuses extending nearly to the mid-rib. The cup scales of the acorn-cup are heavy and distinct.
Post Oak, Q. stellata Wangenh., has stout, irregular branches. The leathery leaves are usually five-lobed; usually the two side lobes are at right angles to the central axis, thus forming a cross-shaped leaf.
Chestnut Oak, Q. prinus L., resembles swamp chestnut oak, Q. michauxii Nutt., a commercially important tree southwide. Chestnut oak is primarily a northeastern tree, extending into the South along the Appalachian highlands into northern Georgia and Alabama where its range overlaps that of swamp chestnut oak, and its leaves lack the dense pubescence found on those of swamp chestnut oak.
Common elms include American Elm, Ulmus americana L., and Winged Elm, U. alata Michx. Both bloom after a freeze breaks dormancy. For example, if a killing frost occurs in the last week of November or the first week of December, American elm will bloom the first week of January. If no killing frost occurs by early December. American elm may not bloom until the third week of January. Winged elm usually blooms 10 days to 2 weeks later than American elm. Small winged elm trees frequently have a corky outgrowth on opposite sides of twigs at least 3 years old. Mature trees often lack this characteristic. The American elm leaf has unequal basal lobing and pubescent or ciliate samaras about 12 mm in diameter; winged elm has a smaller leaf with round to acute leaf bases and a very ciliate samara about 8 mm long.
Young Sugarberry, Celtis laevigata Willd., and Hackberry, C. occidentalis L., trees are readily recognized by a whitish to light gray bark dotted with small corky warts. Older trees often have relatively smooth, light to medium gray bark. Leaf margins of sugarberry are usually entire or indistinctly toothed; the upper half of hackberry leaves are usually conspicuously serrate. Both species produce tiny flowers on the new growth when the leaves are about half normal size. The fruit of sugarberry is orange-red to black; that of hackberry is dark red to nearly black at maturity.
Yellow-poplar, Liriodendron tulipifera L., or tulip tree, has alternate, four- to six-lobed leaves with truncate to distinctly notched apices, a unique feature among American trees. The flowers are tulip-like with red markings on a greenish-yellow background. The fruit is a cone-like aggregate of samaras.
Sweetbay, Magnolia virginiana L., produces moderate-sized trunks on uplands or numerous pole-like suckers in branch bottoms. It is evergreen in the southern part of its range and deciduous in the northern portion. A wind blowing in the crown will expose the silvery underside of the leaves. The white flowers, about 5 to 10 cm in diameter, open for the first time about 3 p.m. and close about 9 p.m. They reopen the next morning and shed their stamens. The fruit is a green pickle-like aggregate of follicles that splits open to reveal red seeds. Sweetbay and yellow-poplar, both members of the Magnolia family, have stipule scars circling the twigs.