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Special Collections

Post Oak Savannah

The Post Oak Savannah lies just to the west of the Pineywoods and mixes considerably with the Blackland Prairies area in the south. This area includes the entire Claypan land resource area of Texas, which is part of the Southern Coastal Plains. The Post Oak Savannah, a gently rolling, moderately dissected wooded plain, is the home biota of Texas A&M University. Upland soils are gray, slightly acid sandy loams, commonly shallow over gray, mottled or red, firm clayey subsoils. They are generally droughty and have claypans at varying depths, restricting moisture percolation. The bottomland soils are reddish brown to dark gray, slightly acid to calcareous, loamy to clayey alluvial.

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scientific namecommon name(s)image gallery
Thelypteris kunthiiWood Fern
River Fern
Southern Shield Fern
Kunth's Maiden Fern
Normal Shield Fern
Tridens albescensWhite Tridens
White Top
Tripsacum dactyloidesEastern Gamagrass
Fakahatchee Grass
Tridens flavusPurpletop Tridens
Redtop Tridens
Tall Redtop Tridens
Purpletop
Redtop
Tall Redtop
Tradescantia giganteaGiant Spiderwort
Tradescantia occidentalisPrairie Spiderwort
Western Spiderwort
Spiderwort
Tradescantia ohiensisOhio Spiderwort
Bluejacket
Triodanis perfoliataClasping Venus's Looking-glass
Triplasis purpureaPurple Sandgrass
Purple Triplasis
Ulmus alataWinged Elm
Wahoo Elm
Cork Elm
Witch Elm
scientific namecommon name(s)image gallery

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General Appearance

Lifespan

Light requirement
 Sun - 6 or more hrs
 Part shade - 2 to 6 hrs
 Shade - 2 hrs or less

Soil moisture
 Dry - no signs of moisture
 Moist - looks & feels damp
 Wet - saturated

Bloom Time
 Jan  Feb  Mar
 Apr  May  Jun
 Jul  Aug  Sep
 Oct  Nov  Dec
Bloom Color
 White  Red  Pink
 Orange  Yellow  Green
 Blue  Purple  Violet
 Brown  Black

Leaf Arrangement
 Alternate
 Opposite
 Whorled
 Fascicled

Leaf Retention
 Deciduous
 Evergreen
 Semi-evergreen