Hydrangea quercifolia.
Distillation
No, a bur oak typically exhibits alternate leaf branching where leaves emerge one at a time along the stem in alternating arrangements. Opposite leaf branching is when leaves emerge in pairs directly across from each other along the stem.
I think you meant a scientific name. A scientific name is the two-part name used to refer to a species. For example:Homo sapiens is the scientific name of the human species.Felis catus is the scientific name of the housecat species.Loxodonta africana is the scientific name of the African elephant species.Quercus alba is the scientific name of the white oak species.
The configuration of the oak leaf is commonly thin and flat. It is commonly identified by it's lobes, areas of the leaf that stretch from the center, and the sinuses, the spaces between the lobes.
No, not all oak leaves have saw-like edges, but yes, some may have atypically, non-sinuate leaf margins. For example, the sawtooth oak (Quercus acutissima) is an example of a tree whose foliage recalls the edges of a saw.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Hydrangeaspp.
The scientific name for a willow oak leaf is Quercus phellos.
Quercus prinus
The accepted scientific name is Croesia semipurpurana.
The white oak tree has the scientific name Quercus alba. This is also the name of the species.
The scientific name for scarlet oak is Quercus coccinea.
Camellia is the State flower of Alabama. Oak leaf hydrangea is the wildflower of Alabama.
The official state wildflower of Alabama is the oak-leaf hydrangea. It was designated as such in 1999.
The scientific name of a Scarlet oak is Quercus coccinea.
The scientific name of post oak is Quercus stellata.
Quercus rubra is the scientific name for Northern Red Oak.
Scientific Name: Quercus coccineaDivision: SimpleArrangement: AlternateVeination: PinateMargin: Lobed and toothedBase: v-shaped