
Pin Oak (Quercus palustris)
Pin oak, a tree that can reach 30m in height, is a monoecious tree. Its male catkins are hairy and 5-10cm, female flowers have wooly hairs and red stigmas. Its acorns are 1-2.5cm wide. The acorn cap is saucer-shaped with very small scales that are covered with tiny hairs, it covers 1/4-1/3 of the nut, which is 10-14mm wide.
Oak Leaf Shepard Lake Road Bear Trail Jennie Weber Creek #S17 River View Drive Pine Lake Road City of Lakeshore Drive Rhinelander Shepard Lake %UC Pine Lake Road Skunk Creek Road Roosevelt Rd TOWN OF PELICAN, ONEIDA COUNTY T 36 N, R 9 E TOWN OF SUGAR CAMP, ONEIDA COUNTY T 38 N, R 9 E
Maryland Senna (Senna marilandica) - Wisconsin
It can be distinguished from the more common S herbecarpa by its short-cylindric or rounded or dome-shaped petiolar glands (not oval or club-shaped), ovary appressed-hairy (not densely villous), joints of the pods (and seeds) about twice as wide as long (not equally wide as long), and somewhat fewer leaflets per leaf (4-8 pairs vs 6-10 pairs).
John Annin, Black Oak Lake Association Laura Felda-Marquardt, UWEX – Lakes Partnership Ken Felsecker, Watersmeet Lake & Wisconsin River Association Patrick Goggin, Vilas County Conservationist Marty Ketterer, Chairman, Cloverland Town Lakes Committee James Lynn, Cloverland Town Lakes Committee
Watershed Detail - North Branch and Mainstem Embarrass Rive
There are two industrial point source dischargers and three municipal point source dischargers in the North Branch and Mainstem Embarrass River Watershed: Village of Bear Creek, Village of Bowler, Embarrass/Cloverleaf Lakes Sanitary District No. 1, Flanagan Brothers, Inc., and the Oak Grove Cheese Factory. Date 1996
Oak Opening - Wisconsin
Oak openings tend to be dominated by members of the white oak group, especially bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa), sometimes white oak (Q. alba), and locally in southwestern Wisconsin, chinquapin oak (Q. muhlenbergii). Black oak (Q. velutina) and shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) may also be present. Canopy closure can vary widely.
Watershed Detail - Springbrook Creek
Curly-leaf pondweed and rusty crayfish have been found in Antigo Lake. Curly-leaf pondweed and cattails are managed within Antigo Lake. Antigo Lake offers a diverse recreational resource including boating and fishing, but has a history of water quality problems including algae blooms, and excess levels of sediment, nutrients and organic matter ...
Watershed Detail - White River
Current vegetation is composed of more than one-third agricultural crops, and almost 20% grasslands with smaller amounts of open wetland, open water, shrubs, barren, and urban areas. The major forested type is oak-hickory, with smaller amounts of white-red-jack pine, maple-basswood, lowland hardwoods, aspen-birch, and spruce-fir. Date 2010
Watershed Detail - Maunesha River - Wisconsin
Agricultural and urban land use practices have drastically changed the land cover of the Southeast Glacial Plains since Euro-American settlement. The current vegetation is primarily agricultural cropland. Remaining forests occupy only about 10% of the land area and consist of maple-basswood, lowland hardwoods, and oak.
Watershed Detail - Wolf River - New London and Bear Creek
Ecological Landscapes. The Wolf River - New London and Bear Creek Watershed is located primarily within the Central Lake Michigan Coastal Ecological Landscape which stretches from southern Door County west across Green Bay to the Wolf River drainage, then southward in a narrowing strip along the Lake Michigan shore to central Milwaukee County.