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Quercus taxonomy
Quercus prinoides Willd.
EOL Text
Population
Population Trend
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Source | http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/33897 |
Major Threats
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Source | http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/33897 |
Comments: Highly threatened by lack of disturbance leading to succession, as well as by habitat loss and fragmentation. Unknown causes of decline are also believed to be a factor (Southern Appalachian Species Viability Project 2002).
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Conservation Actions
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Source | http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/33897 |
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2011) |
Quercus prinoides, commonly known as dwarf chinkapin oak, dwarf chinquapin oak, dwarf chestnut oak or scrub chestnut oak, is a shrubby, clone-forming oak native to eastern North America, ranging from Massachusetts to the Carolinian forest zone of southern Ontario to Minnesota, south to North Carolina and Oklahoma.
Contents
Classification and nomenclature[edit]
Quercus prinoides was named and described by the German botanist Karl (Carl) Ludwig Willdenow in 1801,[1] in a German journal article by the German-American Pennsylvania botanist Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg, with the epithet prinoides referring to its resemblance to Quercus prinus, the chestnut oak.
However, this shrubby oak, now generally accepted as a distinct species, is more closely related to chinkapin oak (Quercus muhlenbergii) than to chestnut oak.[1] These two kinds of oak have sometimes been considered to be conspecific (belonging to the same species), in which case the earlier-published name Q. prinoides has priority, with the larger chinkapin oak then usually classified as Quercus prinoides var. acuminata, and the shrubby form as Q. prinoides var. prinoides.
Description[edit]
The dwarf chinkapin oak is a large, clonally spreading deciduous shrub or very small tree that typically only grows to 13–20 feet (4–6 m) tall and 13–20 feet (4–6 m) wide.[2] The leaves of dwarf chinkapin oak closely resemble those of chinkapin oak, although they are smaller: 2-6 in (5–15 cm) long, compared to 4-7 in (10–18 cm) long for chinkapin oak. The acorns are 1/2 to 1 in (15–25 mm) long, with the cup enclosing about half of the acorn.[citation needed]
While similar in foliage and fruits, but with smaller leaves, the dwarf chinkapin oak may also be distinguished from the chinkapin oak by differences in growth habit (the clonally spreading shrubby growth form and smaller proportions of dwarf chinkapin oak, even when grown on rich soils) and habitat (the chinkapin oak is typically found on rocky, calcareous sites, while the dwarf chinkapin oak is more typically found on dry, often acidic, sandy soils or dry shales).[1]
Ecology and uses[edit]
This section requires expansion. (October 2011) |
The acorns of dwarf chinkapin oak are sweet tasting and relished by humans and many kinds of wildlife. The wood has little commercial value because of the shrub's small size.
References[edit]
- ^ a b c "Quercus prinoides". Flora of North America. Retrieved 8 October 2011.
- ^ Hightshoe, G.L. (1988). Native Trees, Shrubs, and Vines for Urban and Rural America. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
Additional references[edit]
- Sternberg, G. 1998. Quercus prinoides. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 23 August 2007.
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Source | http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Quercus_prinoides&oldid=654093141 |
Some reports of Quercus prinoides growing in calcareous soils are probably referable to shrub forms of Q . muhlenbergii .
The debate over whether Quercus prinoides is distinct from Q . muhlenbergii has continued for most of the last century. Little doubt can exist that strong genetic differences, as expressed by characteristics of habit, leaf form, and habitat preference, separate the two taxa; the question is merely whether they are best treated as subspecies or varieties or as separate species. Over most of the eastern United States, the two taxa occur sympatrically over broad areas with little immediate contact (syntopy), because Q . muhlenbergii is found on calcareous soils and Q . prinoides occurs on sands (often acidic) and dry shales. Seedlings of Q . prinoides can flower and produce acorns in as few as 3-5 years from planting, when only 20-50 cm, and maintain their dwarf, clonal habit in cultivation. Quercus muhlenbergii begins fruiting as a small tree of 3 m or more in height. Because of these differences, and interdigitating geographic distributions, the two taxa seem to be similar in pattern of variation and interaction to other closely related oak species of eastern North America, and dissimilar in pattern to infraspecific taxa such as we see in Q . sinuata var. sinuata and Q . sinuata var. breviloba . The populations that are difficult to determine are usually small scrubby trees, probably mostly Q . muhlenbergii , stunted because of less than favorable moisture conditions, with or without indications of introgression from Q . prinoides .
Material of Quercus prinoides from Long Island, coastal Massachusetts, Nantucket Island, and Martha's Vineyard has been segregated as Q . prinoides Willdenow var. rufescens Rehder on the basis of vestiture and minor differences in leaf form. These populations have appressed-stellate leaf pubescence abaxially, as throughout the range of the species; in addition they have reddish, erect, fasiculate hairs similar to those found in Q . michauxii . The hairs make the abaxial leaf surface somewhat felty to the touch. Variability in this characteristic and lack of other consistently correlated features preclude taxonomic recognition of Q . prinoides var. rufescens , but this problem is worthy of further investigation.
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Shrubs , deciduous, (0.5-)1-3(-5, 10?) m, sometimes spreading-rhizomatous. Bark gray, thin, flaky to papery. Twigs brownish, 1.5-3(-4) mm diam., sparsely fine-pubescent, soon becoming glabrate, graying in 2d year. Buds brown to red-brown, subrotund to broadly ovoid, 1-3 mm, apex rounded, very sparsely pubescent. Leaves: petiole (7-)8-15(-25) mm. Leaf blade lanceolate to oblanceolate or usually obovate, 40-140 × 20-60(-80) mm, leathery, base truncate to cuneate, margins regularly undulate, toothed or shallow-lobed, teeth usually acute, sometimes rounded, or acute-acuminate, often strongly antrorse, secondary veins usually 5-8(-9) on each side, ± parallel, apex short-acute to acuminate; surfaces abaxially glaucous or light green, appearing glabrate, with scattered or crowded minute, appressed, symmetric, 6-10-rayed, stellate hairs, adaxially lustrous dark green, glabrate. Acorns solitary or paired, subsessile or on axillary peduncle to 3-8 mm; cup deeply or shallowly cup-shaped, 9-12 mm deep × 13-17(-22) mm wide, enclosing 1/4-1/3 nut, base rounded, margin usually thin, scales rather tightly appressed, moderately tuberculate, uniformly short gray-pubescent; nut light brown, oblong to ovoid, (13-)15-20 × l0-13 mm. Cotyledons distinct.
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Comments: As treated here (following Kartesz 1994 and 1999), excludes Quercus muehlenbergii, sometimes treated within Quercus prinoides as var. acuminata. A different variety (var. rufescens) has sometimes been recognized but is not accepted by Kartesz (1999). LEM 22Nov00.
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Ont.; Ala., Ark., Conn., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Ky., Mass., Mich., Mo., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Okla., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va.
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Quercus prinoides var. rufescens Rehder
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