How Trees Are Categorized
Trees divide into two fundamental groups: deciduous (drop leaves in fall) and evergreen (keep foliage year-round). Within those groups, trees are further classified by their primary landscape function: shade, ornamental, privacy screening, or fruit production. Understanding which category you need narrows the selection dramatically.
Shade Trees
Shade trees are large canopy trees that reach 40 to 80+ feet tall and provide significant cooling for homes and yards. The most popular shade trees in the Central Plains include red maple, red oak, hackberry, and honey locust. A well-placed shade tree on the south or west side of a home can reduce summer cooling costs by 20 to 30%. Most shade trees take 10 to 20 years to reach functional canopy size.
| Tree | Mature Height | Growth Rate | Zones | Fall Color |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red Maple | 40 to 60 ft | Fast | 3 to 9 | Brilliant red |
| Red Oak | 60 to 75 ft | Fast | 3 to 8 | Russet red |
| Honey Locust | 30 to 70 ft | Fast | 3 to 9 | Yellow |
| Hackberry | 40 to 60 ft | Medium | 2 to 9 | Yellow |
| Bur Oak | 60 to 80 ft | Slow | 3 to 8 | Yellow-brown |
| Tulip Tree | 60 to 90 ft | Fast | 4 to 9 | Yellow |
Ornamental Trees
Ornamental trees are smaller trees (15 to 35 feet) valued for flowers, bark, form, or fall color rather than shade. They fit under power lines, in small yards, and near foundations where a shade tree would overwhelm the space. Popular ornamentals include redbud, dogwood, Japanese maple, crape myrtle, and magnolia.
| Tree | Mature Height | Bloom Season | Zones | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern Redbud | 20 to 30 ft | Early spring | 4 to 9 | Pink-purple flowers before leaves |
| Flowering Dogwood | 15 to 30 ft | Spring | 5 to 9 | White or pink bracts, red berries |
| Japanese Maple | 10 to 25 ft | N/A | 5 to 8 | Leaf form and color year-round |
| Crape Myrtle | 15 to 25 ft | Summer | 6 to 10 | Long-blooming, exfoliating bark |
| Saucer Magnolia | 20 to 30 ft | Early spring | 4 to 9 | Large cup-shaped flowers |
Evergreen Trees
Evergreens provide year-round structure, privacy screening, and winter interest. They divide into needled evergreens (pine, spruce, fir, cedar) and broadleaf evergreens (holly, magnolia, live oak). For privacy screens, consider spacing and mature width carefully: arborvitae planted too close becomes a wall of dead brown on the interior.
| Tree | Mature Height | Form | Zones | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern White Pine | 50 to 80 ft | Pyramidal to rounded | 3 to 8 | Large screens, specimens |
| Colorado Blue Spruce | 30 to 60 ft | Pyramidal | 2 to 7 | Specimen, windbreak |
| Emerald Green Arborvitae | 10 to 15 ft | Narrow columnar | 2 to 7 | Privacy hedge |
| Leyland Cypress | 40 to 60 ft | Pyramidal | 6 to 10 | Fast screen (grows 3+ ft/year) |
| Eastern Red Cedar | 30 to 50 ft | Columnar | 2 to 9 | Native, wildlife value |
Choosing the Right Tree
Start with purpose: do you need shade, screening, flowers, or fruit? Then filter by your hardiness zone, available space (check mature height AND width), and soil conditions. In our 30+ years planting trees in the Omaha metro, the three most common mistakes are: planting too close to the house, ignoring mature size, and choosing species that don’t tolerate local soil pH (our alkaline clay kills acid-loving trees like pin oak and sweet gum).

