Phylogeny The following
cladogram summarizes the relationships that Denk et al. used to draw up their 2017 classification: }}
Section Lobatae Quercus sect.
Lobatae was established by
John Claudius Loudon in 1830. 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. 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. The section contains about 125 species native to
Northern America (including
Mexico),
Central America, and
Colombia in South America. 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. File:028 quercus castanea.jpg|
Quercus castanea leaves and acorns File:Quercus coccinea (scarlet oak) 1.jpg|
Quercus coccinea File:Northern Pin Oak.jpg|Leaves of
Quercus ellipsoidalis File:Quercus myrtifolia mosbo6.jpg|
Quercus myrtifolia growing as a shrub File:Red Oak, Prokocim, Krakow, Poland.jpg|
Quercus rubra in autumn (in cultivation)
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
Aimée Antoinette Camus in 1938. 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. The section contains only five species, native to southwestern North America and northwestern Mexico. File:Quercus cedrosensis 53513896.jpg|
Quercus cedrosensis in habitat in Mexico File:Quercus chrysolepis 08638.JPG|
Quercus chrysolepis leaves showing spines File:Quercus chrysolepis acorns.jpg|
Quercus chrysolepis acorns File:Island Oak in Santa Rosa Island.jpg|
Quercus tomentella in habitat on
Santa Rosa Island, California File:Quercus tomentella acorn.JPG|
Quercus tomentella acorn
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. 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. There are only two species,
Quercus pontica and
Quercus sadleriana. 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. File:Quercus pontica-5.jpg|
Quercus pontica in habitat File:Flickr - brewbooks - Quercus sadleriana (Deer Oak).jpg|
Quercus sadleriana in cultivation
Section Virentes Quercus sect.
Virentes was first established by
John Claudius Loudon in 1838. It has also been treated as a series. Members of the section may be called live oaks. 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. The section contains seven species, native to south-eastern Northern America, Mexico, the West Indies (
Cuba), and Central America.
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). 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. There are about 150 species, native to Northern America, Mexico, Central America, western
Eurasia, East Asia, and North Africa. File:Keeler Oak Tree - distance photo, May 2013.jpg|Large
Quercus alba growing in
New Jersey File:2021-04-22 18 54 32 Male flowers (catkins) on a White Oak within a wooded area in the Franklin Farm section of Oak Hill, Fairfax County, Virginia.jpg|
Quercus alba catkins (staminate or 'male' flowers) File:Leaves of California Scrub Oak.JPG|
Quercus berberidifolia in habitat in
California File:Quercus lusitanica - Köhler–s Medizinal-Pflanzen-253.jpg|
Q. lusitanica flowers, staminate (left) and pistillate (top right) File:Chestnut Oak in Weiser State Forest.JPG|
Q. montana in
Pennsylvania File:Wintereik Engeland.jpg|
Q. petraea in England, about 300 years old File:Летен дъб - цъфтеж, нови листа.JPG|
Q. robur, new leaves and pistillate flowers File:Chêne glands.jpg|
Q. robur leaves and acorns ==Notes==