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Quercus pubescens Willd., 1796

Quercus pubescens-Kallithea-Prespes1.JPG <b><i>Quercus coccifera</b></i> Linnaeus, 1753Thumbnails<b><i>Quercus pubescens</b></i> Willd., 1796 <b><i>Quercus coccifera</b></i> Linnaeus, 1753Thumbnails<b><i>Quercus pubescens</b></i> Willd., 1796 <b><i>Quercus coccifera</b></i> Linnaeus, 1753Thumbnails<b><i>Quercus pubescens</b></i> Willd., 1796 <b><i>Quercus coccifera</b></i> Linnaeus, 1753Thumbnails<b><i>Quercus pubescens</b></i> Willd., 1796 <b><i>Quercus coccifera</b></i> Linnaeus, 1753Thumbnails<b><i>Quercus pubescens</b></i> Willd., 1796

Quercus pubescens Willd., 1796
Common names: Downy oak, Pubescent oak [En], Chêne pubescent, Chêne blanc [Fr], Donzige eik [Nl], Flaumeiche [De], Roverella [It], Roble pubescente [Es], Χνουδωτή Βαλανιδιά, Δρυς χνοώδης [Gr], Tüylü meşe [Tu]

Plati, Prespes, FLORINA ● Greece

Description: Quercus pubescens is a medium-sized deciduous tree growing up to 20 m. Forest-grown trees grow tall, while open-growing trees develop a very broad and irregular crown. The bark is very rough, light grey and divided into small flakes. Large trees develop very thick whitish bark cracked into deep furrows, similar to the Pedunculate oak but lighter in colour.
The twigs are light purple or whitish, tomentose. The buds are small (3–6 mm) and blunt, light brown. The leaves are leathery usually 4–10 cm long (rarely to 13 cm) and 3–6 cm wide, usually widest beyond the middle. The leaves group at the ends of twigs. The upper leaf surface is dark green and rough, the lower light green. Both leaf surfaces are covered with minute pubescence which is sometimes lost in older leaves by late summer. The young expanding leaves are whitish or pinkish with very soft tomentum. The leaf shape is very variable, divided into 3-7 pairs of deep or shallow lobes, which are usually divided into a few sublobes. The lobes are usually blunt, rarely sharp. The apex is usually wide and round. The base of the leaf is heart shaped, widely rounded or sometimes pointed. The petioles are 4–15 mm (rarely to 22 mm) long, stout and pubescent. The leaves are persistent late into the autumn, remaining green up to early winter. They eventually turn russet or brown and fall off.
The acorns are light brown to yellow, 8–20 mm long, usually thin and pointed. The acorn cups are light grey to almost white, with pointed, overlapping scales, covered with tomentum. The acorn stalks are thick and pubescent, up to 2 cm long. The acorns usually occur in groups of 2-5 on the same stalk.

Three subspecies are accepted by Flora Europaea:
Q. p. pubescensQ. p. anatolica O.Schwarz – from Eastern Balkans to Crimea
Q. p. palensis (Palassou) O.Schwarz – northern Spain, Pyrenees.
But their status is still in discussion.

Biology: They are long-lived, to several hundred years, and eventually grow into very stout trees with trunks up to 2 m in diameter. Open-grown trees frequently develop several trunks.

Habitat: Downy oaks typically grow in dry, lime-rich soils. It is a submediterranean species, growing from the coastline to deep in the continent. Its optimum is in the submediterranean region, characterized by hot dry summers and cool winters with little rain fall. In western and central Europe, downy oak is confined to areas with submediteranean microclimate (gorges, sandplains, steppe slopes) or to coastlines of former lakes.

Distribution: It is native to southern Europe and southwest Asia, from northern Spain (Pyrenees) east to the Crimea and the Caucasus. It is also found in France and parts of central Europe.

References:
Wikipedia, Quercus pubescens
Wellstein C.& Spada F., 2015. The Status of Quercus pubescens Willd in Europe, 153-163. 10.1007/978-3-319-01261-2_8.



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