Your search found 33 image(s) of pinnately compound leaves of trees.
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Black Walnut,
Juglans nigra
Leaves aromatic when rubbed; with 15-23 leaflets, terminal one often absent, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Nutmeg Hickory,
Carya myristiciformis
Leaves usually have 7-9 leaflets, densely scaly on the lower surface, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Pecan,
Carya illinoinensis
Leaves with 9-17 leaflets, often having long curved (falcate) tips, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Bitternut Hickory,
Carya cordiformis
Leaves have 7-11 lance-shaped to obovate leaflets w sharply toothed margins, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Water Hickory,
Carya aquatica
Leaves with 9-17 scythe-shaped leaflets, margins finely serrate, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Big Shellbark Hickory,
Carya laciniosa
Leaflets 7 (usually) to 9, lance-shaped to obovate, margins finely serrate, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Sand Hickory,
Carya pallida
Leaves with 5-9 leaflets (usually 7), each rather long-tipped, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Mockernut Hickory,
Carya tomentosa
Usually 7 leaflets, varying in size; margins coarsely or finely toothed, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Pignut Hickory,
Carya glabra
A variable species, leaves typically glabrous with 5 leaflets, per Woody Plants of the Southeastern US: A Winter Guide (Lance, 2004).
Red Hickory,
Carya ovalis
Leaves more commonly with 7 leaflets, per Woody Plants of the Southeastern US: A Winter Guide (Lance, 2004).
Black Hickory,
Carya texana
Only hickory w tufted rust-colored hair on buds, petioles, leaf undersides, per Trees of the Southeastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1988).
American Mountain-ash,
Sorbus americana
Rachis reddish, leaflets 11 to 17, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
American Mountain-ash,
Sorbus americana
Leaflets opposite, more than 3x long as broad, margins toothed; red petiole, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
European Mountain-ash,
Sorbus aucuparia ssp. aucuparia
Leaves with 11-15 bluntly pointed hairy leaflets, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Kentucky Yellowwood,
Cladrastis kentukea
Leaves with 7 to 11 leaflets arranged alternately along rachis, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Black Locust,
Robinia pseudoacacia
Leaflets 7-19, elliptic to oblong-ovate or ovate, 2-5cm long, 1-2cm wide, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Siberian Pea Shrub,
Caragana arborescens
Leaves pinnate, 8-16-foliolate; leaflet blades oblong-obovate to elliptic, per Flora of China.
Ailanthus,
Ailanthus altissima
Tree-of-heaven on left; Black Locust on right.
Ailanthus,
Ailanthus altissima
Leaves w 11-29 leaflets, entire except for rounded basal gland-tipped teeth, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Ailanthus,
Ailanthus altissima
Petiolules 0.2-1cm long, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Poison Sumac,
Toxicodendron vernix
Leaves with 7-13 elliptic, oblong or oblanceolate, entire leaflets, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Staghorn Sumac,
Rhus typhina
Leaves with 15-31 sessile, serrate leaflets, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Winged Sumac,
Rhus copallinum +
Rachis with green marginal wings between leaflets. Leaflet margins entire, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Smooth Sumac,
Rhus glabra
Leaves with 15-19 sessile, serrate leaflets. Rachis not winged, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Eastern Box Elder,
Acer negundo var. negundo
Leaflets coarsely toothed or slightly lobed on margins, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
Eastern Box Elder,
Acer negundo var. negundo
Can be mistaken for Poison Ivy, but that has alternate leaves, per Trees of the Southeastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1988).
Golden Rain-tree,
Koelreuteria paniculata
Lvs pinnate (rarely bipinnate in part), leaflets coarsely crenate to lobulate, per Weakley's Flora.
Western Soapberry,
Sapindus saponaria var. drummondii
Rachis wingless. Leaflets slightly curved or sickle-shaped not unlike pecan, per Manual of Woody Landscape Plants (Dirr, 1975+).
Carolina Ash,
Fraxinus caroliniana
5-9 leaflets varying in size & shape, margins entire or irregularly toothed, per Native Trees of the Southeast, An Identification Guide (Kirkman, Brown, & Leopold, 2007).
White Ash,
Fraxinus americana
Leaves with 7, sometimes 9, leaflets, pale beneath, often slightly hairy, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Biltmore Ash,
Fraxinus biltmoreana
Branchlets, petioles, rachises, and petiolules densely pubescent, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Green Ash,
Fraxinus pennsylvanica
Leaves with 7 or 9 leaflets, glabrous, green on both sides, per Woody Plants of the Blue Ridge (Lance).
Blue Ash,
Fraxinus quadrangulata
Leaflets 5-11, short-stalked, per Trees of the Southeastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1988).