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Quercus subg. Quercus

Quercus subgenus Quercus is one of the two subgenera into which the genus Quercus was divided in a 2017 classification (the other being subgenus Cerris). It contains about 190 species divided among five sections. It may be called the New World clade or the high-latitude clade; most species are native to the Americas, the others being found in Eurasia and northernmost North Africa.

Quercus subg. Quercus
Quercus robur (type species) growing in England
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fagales
Family: Fagaceae
Genus: Quercus
Subgenus: Quercus subg. Quercus
Sections[2]
  • Quercus sect. Lobatae Loudon
  • Quercus sect. Ponticae Stef.
  • Quercus sect. Protobalanus (Trelease) O.Schwarz[1]
  • Quercus sect. Quercus
  • Quercus sect. Virentes Loudon

Description edit

Members of subgenus Quercus are distinguished from members of subgenus Cerris by few morphological features, their separation being largely determined by molecular phylogenetic evidence. All are trees or shrubs bearing acorn-like fruit in which a cup covers at least the base of the nut. The outer structure of the mature pollen is one feature that distinguishes the two subgenera: in subgenus Quercus, the small folds or wrinkles (rugulae) are obscured by sporopollenin, whereas in subgenus Cerris, the rugulae are visible or at most weakly obscured.[2]

The two subgenera are also distinguished to some extent by their different distributions. Subgenus Quercus occurs mainly in the Americas, with some species native to Eurasia and North Africa, and may be called the New World clade or the high-latitude clade. Subgenus Cerris is primarily Eurasian, with a few species in North Africa, and may be called the Old World clade or the mid-latitude clade.[2]

Taxonomy edit

Phylogeny edit

The following cladogram summarizes the relationships that Denk et al. used to draw up their 2017 classification:[2]

Quercus
subg. Quercus

sect. Lobatae

sect. Protobalanus

sect. Ponticae

sect. Virentes

sect. Quercus

subg. Cerris

Section Lobatae edit

Quercus sect. Lobatae was established by John Claudius Loudon in 1830.[3] The section, or part of it, has also been treated under names including Quercus sect. Rubrae Loudon and Quercus sect. Erythrobalanus Spach. It has also been treated as the subgenus Erythrobalanus and as the full genus Erythrobalanus (Spach) O.Schwarz. Its members may be called red oaks.[2]

The perianth of the pistillate flowers has a characteristic flange-like shape. The staminate flowers have up to six stamens. The stalk connecting the perianth to the ovary is cone-shaped and often has rings. The acorns mature in two years, rarely in one year. The 'cup' (cupule) of the acorn is fused with its stalk (peduncule) forming a connective piece. Both the connective piece and the cup are covered with small triangular scales, mostly thin and membranous with broadly angled tips. The leaves typically have teeth with bristle-like extensions, or just bristles in leaves without teeth.[2]

The section contains about 125 species native to Northern America (including Mexico), Central America, and Colombia in South America.[2] The red oaks of Mexico are one of the groups of oaks that have most rapidly diversified into different species. Molecular evidence suggests that there are significant numbers of undescribed Quercus species in Mexico, so the number of known species in the section is likely to be an underestimate of the total diversity.[4]

Section Protobalanus edit

Quercus sect. Protobalanus was first established as a subgenus by William Trelease in 1922 and then later treated as a section by Otto Karl Anton Schwarz in 1936 and Aimée Antoinette Camus in 1938.[2][note 1]

The staminate flowers have eight to ten stamens. The pollen ornamentation has only small wrinkles or folds (verrucae). The acorns mature after two years. The cup (cupule) at the base of the acorn has triangular scales that are fused at the base and have sharp angled tips. The scales are thick and compressed into rings, often forming small bumps, that may be obscured by glandular hairs. The leaf teeth end in spines.[2]

The section contains only five species, native to southwestern North America and northwestern Mexico.[2]

Section Ponticae edit

Quercus sect. Ponticae was first established by Boris Stefanoff in 1930. It has also been treated as a subsection and a series, including under the name Q. ser. Sadlerianae Trelease.[2]

Species are shrubs or small trees, with rhizomes. The staminate catkins are up to 10 cm long. The cup (cupule) at the base of the acorn has scales with sharp angled ends. The leaves are either evergreen or deciduous, with simple or compound teeth. The leaf buds are large, enclosed in loosely attached scales.[2]

There are only two species, Quercus pontica and Quercus sadleriana.[5] They have disjoint distributions. Quercus pontica is native to mountainous areas of north-eastern Turkey and western Georgia. Quercus sadleriana is native to northern-most California and southern-most Oregon in the United States.[2]

Section Virentes edit

Quercus sect. Virentes was first established by John Claudius Loudon in 1838. It has also been treated as a series.[2] Members of the section may be called live oaks.[6]

Species are trees or rhizomatous shrubs. They are evergreen or brevideciduous. The acorns mature in a year. The cup at the base of the acorn has narrowly triangular scales, with thin keels, at most small bumps (tubercules), and sharp angled ends. The leaves are evergreen or almost so. A distinctive feature of the section is that the germinating seed has fused seed leaves (cotyledons) and an elongated stem above the cotyledons (the epicotyl) that forms a tube, while the stem below the cotyledons (the hypocotyl) is tuberous.[2]

The section contains seven species, native to south-eastern Northern America, Mexico, the West Indies (Cuba), and Central America.[2]

Section Quercus edit

Quercus sect. Quercus has been known, either in whole or part, by a variety of names in the past, including Quercus sect. Albae, Quercus sect. Macrocarpae and Quercus sect. Mesobalanus. Members of the section may be called white oaks. The section includes all white oaks from North America (treated by Trelease as subgenus Leucobalanus).[2]

The staminate flowers have seven or more stamens. The acorns mature in one year. The seed leaves (cotyledons) are either free or fused together. The cup at the base of the acorn has thickened triangular scales that are either free or fused at the base and have sharp angled tips. The scales have keels and are often covered with small bumps (tuberculate). The leaf teeth typically do not have either bristle-like or spiny tips.[2]

There are about 150 species, native to Northern America, Mexico, Central America, western Eurasia, East Asia, and North Africa.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ At page 23, Denk et al. have only the surnames "Schwarz" and "Camus", but these are the standard botanical abbreviations for the wrong authors. "Schwarz" should be "O. Schwarz",[1] standard abbreviation "O.Schwarz".[7] "Camus" should be "A.Camus".[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Schwarz, O. (1936), "Entwurf zu einem natürlichen System der Cupuliferen und der Gattung Quercus L.", Notizblatt des Königlichen Botanischen Gartens und Museums zu Berlin (in German), 13 (116): 1–22, doi:10.2307/3994908, JSTOR 3994908, p. 21
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Denk, Thomas; Grimm, Guido W.; Manos, Paul S.; Deng, Min & Hipp, Andrew L. (2017), "An Updated Infrageneric Classification of the Oaks: Review of Previous Taxonomic Schemes and Synthesis of Evolutionary Patterns", in Gil-Pelegrín, Eustaquio; Peguero-Pina, José Javier & Sancho-Knapik, Domingo (eds.), Oaks Physiological Ecology. Exploring the Functional Diversity of Genus Quercus L., Cham.: Springer International Publishing, pp. 13–38, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-69099-5_2, ISBN 978-3-319-69099-5
  3. ^ "Quercus sect. Lobatae Loudon", The International Plant Names Index, retrieved 2023-02-25
  4. ^ Hipp, Andrew L.; Manos, Paul S.; Hahn, Marlene; Avishai, Michael; Bodénès, Cathérine; Cavender-Bares, Jeannine; Crowl, Andrew A.; Deng, Min; Denk, Thomas; Fitz-Gibbon, Sorel; Gailing, Oliver; González-Elizondo, M. Socorro; González-Rodríguez, Antonio; Grimm, Guido W.; Jiang, Xiao-Long; Kremer, Antoine; Lesur, Isabelle; McVay, John D.; Plomion, Christophe; Rodríguez-Correa, Hernando; Schulze, Ernst-Detlef; Simeone, Marco C.; Sork, Victoria L. & Valencia-Avalos, Susana (2020), "Genomic landscape of the global oak phylogeny" (PDF), New Phytologist, 226 (4): 1198–1212, doi:10.1111/nph.16162, PMID 31609470
  5. ^ Denk, Thomas; Grimm, Guido W.; Manos, Paul S.; Deng, Min & Hipp, Andrew L. (2017-11-02), "Appendix 2.1: An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks" (xls), figshare, doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.5547622.v1, retrieved 2023-02-17
  6. ^ Cavender‐Bares, Jeannine; González‐Rodríguez, Antonio; Eaton, Deren A. R.; Hipp, Andrew A. L.; Beulke, Anne; Manos, Paul S. (2015), "Phylogeny and biogeography of the American live oaks (Quercus subsection Virentes): a genomic and population genetics approach", Molecular Ecology, vol. 24, no. 14, pp. 3668–3687, doi:10.1111/mec.13269, PMID 26095958
  7. ^ "Schwartz, Oskar (1901-1945)", The International Plant Names Index, retrieved 2023-02-25
  8. ^ "Les Chênes: Monographie du genre Quercus", The International Plant Names Index, retrieved 2023-02-25

quercus, subg, quercus, quercus, subgenus, quercus, subgenera, into, which, genus, quercus, divided, 2017, classification, other, being, subgenus, cerris, contains, about, species, divided, among, five, sections, called, world, clade, high, latitude, clade, mo. Quercus subgenus Quercus is one of the two subgenera into which the genus Quercus was divided in a 2017 classification the other being subgenus Cerris It contains about 190 species divided among five sections It may be called the New World clade or the high latitude clade most species are native to the Americas the others being found in Eurasia and northernmost North Africa Quercus subg QuercusQuercus robur type species growing in EnglandScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder FagalesFamily FagaceaeGenus QuercusSubgenus Quercus subg QuercusSections 2 Quercus sect Lobatae Loudon Quercus sect Ponticae Stef Quercus sect Protobalanus Trelease O Schwarz 1 Quercus sect Quercus Quercus sect Virentes Loudon Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Phylogeny 2 2 Section Lobatae 2 3 Section Protobalanus 2 4 Section Ponticae 2 5 Section Virentes 2 6 Section Quercus 3 Notes 4 ReferencesDescription editMembers of subgenus Quercus are distinguished from members of subgenus Cerris by few morphological features their separation being largely determined by molecular phylogenetic evidence All are trees or shrubs bearing acorn like fruit in which a cup covers at least the base of the nut The outer structure of the mature pollen is one feature that distinguishes the two subgenera in subgenus Quercus the small folds or wrinkles rugulae are obscured by sporopollenin whereas in subgenus Cerris the rugulae are visible or at most weakly obscured 2 The two subgenera are also distinguished to some extent by their different distributions Subgenus Quercus occurs mainly in the Americas with some species native to Eurasia and North Africa and may be called the New World clade or the high latitude clade Subgenus Cerris is primarily Eurasian with a few species in North Africa and may be called the Old World clade or the mid latitude clade 2 Taxonomy editPhylogeny edit The following cladogram summarizes the relationships that Denk et al used to draw up their 2017 classification 2 Quercus subg Quercus sect Lobataesect Protobalanussect Ponticaesect Virentessect Quercussubg CerrisSection Lobatae edit Red oak redirects here For other uses see Red oak disambiguation See also List of Quercus species Section Lobatae Quercus sect Lobatae was established by John Claudius Loudon in 1830 3 The section or part of it has also been treated under names including Quercus sect Rubrae Loudon and Quercus sect Erythrobalanus Spach It has also been treated as the subgenus Erythrobalanus and as the full genus Erythrobalanus Spach O Schwarz Its members may be called red oaks 2 The perianth of the pistillate flowers has a characteristic flange like shape The staminate flowers have up to six stamens The stalk connecting the perianth to the ovary is cone shaped and often has rings The acorns mature in two years rarely in one year The cup cupule of the acorn is fused with its stalk peduncule forming a connective piece Both the connective piece and the cup are covered with small triangular scales mostly thin and membranous with broadly angled tips The leaves typically have teeth with bristle like extensions or just bristles in leaves without teeth 2 The section contains about 125 species native to Northern America including Mexico Central America and Colombia in South America 2 The red oaks of Mexico are one of the groups of oaks that have most rapidly diversified into different species Molecular evidence suggests that there are significant numbers of undescribed Quercus species in Mexico so the number of known species in the section is likely to be an underestimate of the total diversity 4 nbsp Quercus castanea leaves and acorns nbsp Quercus coccinea nbsp Leaves of Quercus ellipsoidalis nbsp Quercus myrtifolia growing as a shrub nbsp Quercus rubra in autumn in cultivation Section Protobalanus edit See also List of Quercus species Section Protobalanus Quercus sect Protobalanus was first established as a subgenus by William Trelease in 1922 and then later treated as a section by Otto Karl Anton Schwarz in 1936 and Aimee Antoinette Camus in 1938 2 note 1 The staminate flowers have eight to ten stamens The pollen ornamentation has only small wrinkles or folds verrucae The acorns mature after two years The cup cupule at the base of the acorn has triangular scales that are fused at the base and have sharp angled tips The scales are thick and compressed into rings often forming small bumps that may be obscured by glandular hairs The leaf teeth end in spines 2 The section contains only five species native to southwestern North America and northwestern Mexico 2 nbsp Quercus cedrosensis in habitat in Mexico nbsp Quercus chrysolepis leaves showing spines nbsp Quercus chrysolepis acorns nbsp Quercus tomentella in habitat on Santa Rosa Island California nbsp Quercus tomentella acornSection Ponticae edit See also List of Quercus species Section Ponticae Quercus sect Ponticae was first established by Boris Stefanoff in 1930 It has also been treated as a subsection and a series including under the name Q ser Sadlerianae Trelease 2 Species are shrubs or small trees with rhizomes The staminate catkins are up to 10 cm long The cup cupule at the base of the acorn has scales with sharp angled ends The leaves are either evergreen or deciduous with simple or compound teeth The leaf buds are large enclosed in loosely attached scales 2 There are only two species Quercus pontica and Quercus sadleriana 5 They have disjoint distributions Quercus pontica is native to mountainous areas of north eastern Turkey and western Georgia Quercus sadleriana is native to northern most California and southern most Oregon in the United States 2 nbsp Quercus pontica in habitat nbsp Quercus sadleriana in cultivationSection Virentes edit See also List of Quercus species Section Virentes Quercus sect Virentes was first established by John Claudius Loudon in 1838 It has also been treated as a series 2 Members of the section may be called live oaks 6 Species are trees or rhizomatous shrubs They are evergreen or brevideciduous The acorns mature in a year The cup at the base of the acorn has narrowly triangular scales with thin keels at most small bumps tubercules and sharp angled ends The leaves are evergreen or almost so A distinctive feature of the section is that the germinating seed has fused seed leaves cotyledons and an elongated stem above the cotyledons the epicotyl that forms a tube while the stem below the cotyledons the hypocotyl is tuberous 2 The section contains seven species native to south eastern Northern America Mexico the West Indies Cuba and Central America 2 Section Quercus edit White oak redirects here For other uses see White oak disambiguation See also List of Quercus species Section Quercus Quercus sect Quercus has been known either in whole or part by a variety of names in the past including Quercus sect Albae Quercus sect Macrocarpae and Quercus sect Mesobalanus Members of the section may be called white oaks The section includes all white oaks from North America treated by Trelease as subgenus Leucobalanus 2 The staminate flowers have seven or more stamens The acorns mature in one year The seed leaves cotyledons are either free or fused together The cup at the base of the acorn has thickened triangular scales that are either free or fused at the base and have sharp angled tips The scales have keels and are often covered with small bumps tuberculate The leaf teeth typically do not have either bristle like or spiny tips 2 There are about 150 species native to Northern America Mexico Central America western Eurasia East Asia and North Africa 2 nbsp Large Quercus alba growing in New Jersey nbsp Quercus alba catkins staminate or male flowers nbsp Quercus berberidifolia in habitat in California nbsp Illustration of Quercus lusitanica showing staminate left and pistillate flowers top right nbsp Quercus montana in Pennsylvania nbsp Quercus petraea in England about 300 years old nbsp New leaves and pistillate female flowers of Quercus robur nbsp Quercus robur leaves and acornsNotes edit At page 23 Denk et al have only the surnames Schwarz and Camus but these are the standard botanical abbreviations for the wrong authors Schwarz should be O Schwarz 1 standard abbreviation O Schwarz 7 Camus should be A Camus 8 References edit a b Schwarz O 1936 Entwurf zu einem naturlichen System der Cupuliferen und der Gattung Quercus L Notizblatt des Koniglichen Botanischen Gartens und Museums zu Berlin in German 13 116 1 22 doi 10 2307 3994908 JSTOR 3994908 p 21 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Denk Thomas Grimm Guido W Manos Paul S Deng Min amp Hipp Andrew L 2017 An Updated Infrageneric Classification of the Oaks Review of Previous Taxonomic Schemes and Synthesis of Evolutionary Patterns in Gil Pelegrin Eustaquio Peguero Pina Jose Javier amp Sancho Knapik Domingo eds Oaks Physiological Ecology Exploring the Functional Diversity of GenusQuercusL Cham Springer International Publishing pp 13 38 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 69099 5 2 ISBN 978 3 319 69099 5 Quercus sect Lobatae Loudon The International Plant Names Index retrieved 2023 02 25 Hipp Andrew L Manos Paul S Hahn Marlene Avishai Michael Bodenes Catherine Cavender Bares Jeannine Crowl Andrew A Deng Min Denk Thomas Fitz Gibbon Sorel Gailing Oliver Gonzalez Elizondo M Socorro Gonzalez Rodriguez Antonio Grimm Guido W Jiang Xiao Long Kremer Antoine Lesur Isabelle McVay John D Plomion Christophe Rodriguez Correa Hernando Schulze Ernst Detlef Simeone Marco C Sork Victoria L amp Valencia Avalos Susana 2020 Genomic landscape of the global oak phylogeny PDF New Phytologist 226 4 1198 1212 doi 10 1111 nph 16162 PMID 31609470 Denk Thomas Grimm Guido W Manos Paul S Deng Min amp Hipp Andrew L 2017 11 02 Appendix 2 1 An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks xls figshare doi 10 6084 m9 figshare 5547622 v1 retrieved 2023 02 17 Cavender Bares Jeannine Gonzalez Rodriguez Antonio Eaton Deren A R Hipp Andrew A L Beulke Anne Manos Paul S 2015 Phylogeny and biogeography of the American live oaks Quercus subsection Virentes a genomic and population genetics approach Molecular Ecology vol 24 no 14 pp 3668 3687 doi 10 1111 mec 13269 PMID 26095958 Schwartz Oskar 1901 1945 The International Plant Names Index retrieved 2023 02 25 Les Chenes Monographie du genre Quercus The International Plant Names Index retrieved 2023 02 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quercus subg Quercus amp oldid 1203280131 Section Quercus, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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