Common trees in this habitat include northern red oak, white oak, and chestnut oak.
The chinkapin oak also has much smaller acorns than the chestnut oak.
The wood of the swamp chestnut oak is similar to, and usually marketed mixed with, other white oaks.
"We'd love to be able to tell him there's a vast tract of chestnut oaks dying," said Miss Forster.
There are also fifty-five different trees species, such as pine-oak, chestnut oak, and mixed hardwoods.
The chestnut oak, Quercus prinus, has been known to live twice as long.
Among the most prevalent trees of this region are the chestnut oaks, the walnut, the yellow poplar, and the cherry.
The acorns of the chestnut oak are a valuable wildlife food.
Much of the park is an oak-hickory forest, with chestnut oak the dominant hardwood.
Italian paintings used local or sometimes Dalmatian wood, most often poplar, but including chestnut, walnut, oak and other woods.