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white oak (Quercus alba) observed in Loves Park, IL, US

iNaturalist: jfb458

Native Plants

White oaks in your region support over 500 species of caterpillars and moths, making a single mature tree one of the most wildlife-dense plantings you could ever put — or keep — in a yard.

Someone spotted and photographed a white oak in Loves Park, Illinois, and the iNaturalist community confirmed the identification, giving it 'research grade' status. White oaks are long-lived native trees known for their deeply lobed leaves and sweet acorns that wildlife depend on. This kind of community observation helps scientists and land managers track where these trees are actually thriving across the landscape.

Key Findings

1

Research-grade observation confirmed by the iNaturalist community in Loves Park, IL, US

2

White oak (Quercus alba) is documented as present in this Winnebago County location, expanding citizen-science range data

3

Observation contributes to the global iNaturalist dataset, which has logged millions of Quercus records used in ecological modeling

chevron_right Technical Summary

A white oak was observed and confirmed at research grade in Loves Park, IL — adding a verified data point to the documented range of one of North America's most ecologically significant native trees.

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Research-grade observation of white oak in Loves Park, IL, US.

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — White Oak native-plants, urban-ecology, phenology +2 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

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Species
Quercus subg. Quercus

Quercus subgenus Quercus is one of the two subgenera into which the genus Quercus was divided in a 2017 classification. It contains about 190 species divided among five sections. It may be called the New World clade or the high-latitude clade; most species are native to the Americas, the others b...