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Plant Focus
A naturally occurring hybrid between Quercus robur and Q. alba.
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Copyright of International Oaks and to articles in their final form as they appear in the publication belong to the International Oak Society. Copyrights to texts, photographs, illustrations, figures, etc. belong to individual authors and photographers. Anyone wishing to use portions of International Oaks for other publications or websites should secure permission from the International Oak Society, the author, photographer or artist, and must include a credit line indicating International Oaks as the source of the material.
Table of Contents
Click on the links below to download individual articles
- The Name Game - Guy Sternberg
- Homonyms, Synonyms, and Frustrations: An Introduction to the Name Problems of Oaks - Thierry Lamant and Guy Sternberg
- Nomenclature Problems in Oak Propagation - Allen J. Coombes
- Oak Barrels: Where They Come from and How They Are Made - Mel Knox
- A New Species of Red Oak (Quercus sec. lobatae) from Central Mexico - Fernando Zavala-Chavez
- Clonal Oak Propagation: Almost a Reality - Nina L. Bassuk
- Among the Oaks of Borneo and Java - Eike Jablonski