More info for the terms:
forest,
swampSwamp white oak occurs in river bottomlands, depressions, along
streamsides, swamp borders, and on moist peaty flats [
10,
20]. It is a
minor component in tamarack (Larix laricina) swamps of southwestern
Michigan [
16]. Along the Ohio shores of Lake Erie, swamp white oak
grows in Toledo soil, a very poorly drained, silty clay. It also grows
on Nappanee soils, which are somewhat poorly drained silt loams [
13].
Along the Kankakee River on the Illinois and Indiana border, swamp white
oak is a major overstory component of the floodplain forest. Here the
soils are highly permeable, frequently flooded sandy loams [
21]. In
Quebec, swamp white oak occurs on sandy and loamy sand alluvium between
68 and 87 feet (22.6 and 28.9 m) in elevation [
30].
Plant associates include pin oak (Quercus palustris), northern red oak
(Q. rubra), hickory (Carya spp.), beech (Fagus spp.), sweetgum
(Liquidambar styraciflua), yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera), red
maple (Acer rubrum), silver maple (A. saccharinum), green ash (Fraxinus
pennsylvanicum), tamarack, dogwood (Cornus spp.), sumac (Rhus spp.),
serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.), grape (Vitis spp.), holly (Ilex spp.),
and viburnum (Viburnum spp.) [
3,
5,
9,
12,
30].