Quercus vaseyana

Buckley

Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 10: 91. 1883.

Common names: Vasey oak
Illustrated
Synonyms: Quercus pungens var. vaseyana (Buckley) C. H. Muller Quercus undulata var. vaseyana (Buckley) Rydberg
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 3.

Shrubs or small trees, evergreen or subevergreen, to 10 m. Bark dark brown, furrowed and exfoliating in long strips. Twigs reddish or grayish brown, 1-1.5 mm diam., short stellate-tomentose or tomentulose, later glabrate or persistently pubescent, rarely glabrous. Buds dark red-brown or gray, round-ovoid, 1-1.5 mm, apex obtuse, sparsely pubescent or glabrate. Leaves: petiole to 5 mm. Leaf blade narrowly lanceolate to usually oblong, mostly planar or slightly convex, 20-60(-90) × 10-20 mm, often rather leathery, base cuneate to rounded, margins coarsely 3-5-toothed on each side or shallowly lobed or entire, with teeth or lobes acute or obtuse, mucronate-tipped, secondary veins 4-6 on each side, usually branched, apex acute, rarely obtuse; surfaces abaxially densely stellate with minute appressed hairs, rarely glabrate and lustrous green, adaxially dark green, lustrous, glabrous or very sparsely stellate-puberulent. Acorns subsessile or on peduncle 2-3 mm; cup saucer-shaped to cup-shaped, 3-4 mm deep × 10 mm wide, margin thin, scales reddish brown, strongly, regularly tuberculate; nut light brown, ovoid to oblong or subcylindric, to 12 × 12 mm, glabrous. Cotyledons distinct.


Phenology: Flowering spring.
Habitat: Dry limestone slopes, oak and mesquite woodlands, juniper woodlands, and canyons and ravines in otherwise dry, open grasslands, sometimes descending into margins of dry scrub
Elevation: 300-600 m

Distribution

V3 263-distribution-map.gif

Tex., Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Nuevo León).

Discussion

Apparent hybridization between Quercus vaseyana and Q. pungens is discussed under the latter species.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Quercus vaseyana"
Kevin C. Nixon +  and Cornelius H. Muller +
Buckley +
Vasey oak +
Tex. +, Mexico (Chihuahua +, Coahuila +  and and Nuevo León). +
300-600 m +
Dry limestone slopes, oak and mesquite woodlands, juniper woodlands, and canyons and ravines in otherwise dry, open grasslands, sometimes descending into margins of dry scrub +
Flowering spring. +
Bull. Torrey Bot. Club +
Illustrated +
Quercus pungens var. vaseyana +  and Quercus undulata var. vaseyana +
Quercus vaseyana +
Quercus sect. Quercus +
species +