Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Quercus vaccinifolia

Quercus vaccinifolia Kellogg  
Family: Fagaceae
[Quercus chrysolepis var. vaccinifolia (Kellogg) Engelm.]
Quercus vaccinifolia image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Kevin C. Nixon in Flora of North America (vol. 3)
Shrubs , low spreading to often prostrate, to 1.5 m. Twigs branching at 45° angles or less, reddish brown, 1-1.5 mm diam., flexible, glabrous to sparsely pubesent. Terminal buds conic, 2.5 mm, scales brown with ciliate margins. Leaves: petiole 5-8 mm, sparsely pubescent, flattened adaxially. Leaf blade oblong-ovate, 10-35 × 7-15 mm, flat, thin, leathery, base slightly rounded to acute, secondary veins inconspicuous, 6-8 pairs, branching at 45-60° angles, with weakly thickened cell walls, margins entire or indistinctly and irregularly mucronately toothed, apex acute or rarely obtuse; surfaces abaxially whitish green with waxy layer, glabrous or slightly pubescent with stellate hairs, adaxially dull gray-green, glabrous or sparsely pubescent with stellate hairs. Acorns solitary or rarely paired; cup shallowly saucer-shaped to slightly turbinate, 3-4 mm deep × 10-15 mm wide, scales appressed, slightly embedded, moderately silvery brown-pubescent; nut ovoid, 8-17 × 5-10 mm, apex acute; nut scar to 3 mm diam.

Flowering in early summer. Dry ridges, steep slopes, and rocky areas from montane coniferous zone to near treeline; 900-2800 m; Calif., Nev., Oreg.

Typical high-elevation populations in the Sierra Nevada of California can be distinguished from all shrubby forms of Quercus chrysolepis by the absence of glandular trichomes and by thin cups with small nut-attachment scars. At lower elevations in northern California and southwestern Oregon, secondary contact with Q . chrysolepis has resulted in the formation of hybrids.

Quercus vaccinifolia
Open Interactive Map
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Quercus vaccinifolia image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.