Quercus incana |
Quercus carmenensis |
|
---|---|---|
bluejack oak |
Mexican oak |
|
Habit | Trees, deciduous, to 10 m. Bark dark brown to black with square plates. | Shrubs or trees, deciduous, shrubs 0.5-2 m, rhizomatous, trees (on better sites) to 12 m, trunk 0.75 m diam. |
Bark | light gray, checkered or furrowed. |
|
Twigs | brown to reddish brown, 1-2.5 mm diam., tomentose to sparsely pubescent. |
often strikingly red, 1-1.5 mm diam., sparingly (rarely densely) stellate-pubescent, somewhat glabrescent and gray 2d year. |
Buds | light brown, nearly round, 1-1.5 mm, indumentum similar to twigs. |
|
Leaves | blade narrowly ovate or elliptic to obovate, usually widest near middle, planar, 30-100 × 12-35 mm, base acute (rarely attenuate) to rounded, margins entire, with 1 apical awn (leaves on juvenile or 2d-flush growth may have 2-3 shallow lobes and 3-5 awns), apex acute or obtuse, rarely rounded; surfaces abaxially densely tomentose, hairs in vein axils often reddish, easily distinguished from others, adaxially often glossy, sparsely pubescent, especially along midrib and near base, veins often raised. |
blade obovate or narrowly obovate, (20-)30-50 × 10-30 mm, thin to moderately leathery, base cuneate to rounded, margins shallowly and irregularly lobed or coarsely toothed in distal 1/2, rarely subentire, teeth mucronate, secondary veins 9-12 on each side, branching or passing directly to teeth, apex acute, sometimes broadly rounded; surfaces abaxially light green or yellow-green, prominently pubescent with minute, erect velvety hairs, adaxially surfaces dark green, sparsely and minutely stellate-pubescent. |
Acorns | biennial; cup saucer-shaped to bowl-shaped, 4.5-8 mm high × 10-18 mm wide, covering 1/4-1/3(-1/2) nut, outer surface pubescent or puberulent, inner surface uniformly pubescent, scale tips tightly appressed, obtuse or acute; nut ovoid (rarely subglobose) to broadly ellipsoid, 10-17 × 10-16 mm, occasionally striate, glabrate, scar diam. 5.5-10.5 mm. |
solitary or paired, subsessile or short-pedunculate (immature); cup (mature) unknown; scales (immature) light brown, tip acute, canescent. |
Cotyledons | unknown. |
|
Terminal | buds light brown to reddish brown, narrowly ovoid to conic, 3.5-7 mm, distinctly 5-angled in cross section, scales pubescent, often tuft of reddish or silvery hairs at apex. |
|
Nut | unknown. |
|
Quercus incana |
Quercus carmenensis |
|
Phenology | Flowering spring. | |
Habitat | Well-drained sandy soils of barrens, hammocks, dunes, and upland ridges | Shrublands and woodlands on limestone |
Elevation | 0-250 m (0-800 ft) | 2200-2500 m (7200-8200 ft) |
Distribution |
AL; AR; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; OK; SC; TX; VA
|
TX; Mexico (Coahuila) |
Discussion | Quercus incana reportedly hybridizes with Q. falcata [= Q. ×subintegra (Engelmann) Trelease], Q. hemisphaerica (D. M. Hunt 1989), Q. laurifolia (= Q. ×atlantica Ashe), Q. laevis (= Q. ×asheana Little), Q. marilandica (= Q. ×cravenensis Little), Q. nigra (= Q. ×caduca Trelease), and Q. phellos (E. J. Palmer 1948); with Q. pumila (D. M. Hunt 1989); and with Q. velutina (= Q. ×podophylla Trelease), and questionably, Q. myrtifolia. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Of conservation concern. Shrublands and woodlands on limestone; of conservation concern; 2200-2500 m; Tex.; Mexico (Coahuila). Quercus carmenensis is known in the United States from only one collection from the Chisos Mountains, Texas; otherwise, it is known in the Sierra del Carmen region, Coahuila, Mexico. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 3. | FNA vol. 3. |
Parent taxa | Fagaceae > Quercus > sect. Lobatae | Fagaceae > Quercus > sect. Quercus |
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Q. cinerea | |
Name authority | W. Bartram: Travels Carolina, 378. (1791) | C. H. Muller: Amer. Midl. Naturalist 18: 847. (1937) |
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