| QUERCUS GARRYANA
OREGON OAK
Species Name: Quercus
garryana
Family: Fagaceae
(oak family)
Plant Type: Broad-leaf
tree

Description: Tree,
wide top, height to 65 feet, deciduous with reddish-brown autumn color.
Leaf:
Length 2-6 inches, surface dark green,
leathery, shiny, underside pale green to rusty with downy hair, margin
with 5-7 deep, rounded lobes.
Flower: Female
flower tiny, singular or small clusters on new growth; male flower
catkin, long, threadlike strand containing 25-100 male flowers, located
on older growth.
Fruit/Seed: Acorn:
oval to spherical, rounded tip, length
to 1 inch, smooth interior, ripens in autumn after 1-year growth (but
abundant crop irregular, every 2-5 years). Cap
small, shallow, cup-like with smooth to slightly bumpy scales.
Typical Location:
Established floodplain, valleys;
elevations 1,000 to 5,900 feet.
Revegetation Approach:
Container, direct seed.
May hybridize with other oak species.
Key Notes:
Leaf
and acorn morphology helps distinguish from valley oak (Q. lobata) and
live oak (Q. agrifolia).
Notes:
Trees provide roosts and nesting sites
for cavity nesting birds and bats. Acorns
are an important food source for many wildlife species, especially
woodpeckers and squirrels. Native
Americans utilized acorns as a food crop, but less favored than live
oak. Trees harvested for lumber.
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