Fossil history Potential records of
Quercus have been reported from
Late Cretaceous deposits in North America and East Asia. These are not considered definitive, as macrofossils older than the
Paleogene, and possibly from before the
Eocene are mostly poorly preserved without critical features for certain identification. Amongst the oldest unequivocal records of
Quercus are pollen from Austria, dating to the
Paleocene-Eocene boundary, around 55 million years ago. The oldest records of
Quercus in North America are from
Oregon, dating to the Middle Eocene, around 44 million years ago, with the oldest records in Asia from the Middle Eocene of Japan; both forms have affinities to the
Cyclobalanopsis group. File:Quercus hispanica 20170317.jpg|
Quercus × hispanica leaf.
Miocene,
Lleida, Spain File:Quercus hiholensis acorn UWBM 56470-3 Pigg & Wehr 2002 Plt2 fig16.png|
Quercus hiholensis acorn,
Langhian age (Middle Miocene), Washington State, US (c. 15 mya) File:Quercus kobatakei leaf (cropped).jpg|
Quercus kobatakei leaf. Early
Oligocene, Japan File:Early Oligocene oak acorn from Bridge Creek Flora.jpg|Early Oligocene acorn, Oregon, US (33 mya)
External phylogeny Quercus forms part, or rather two parts, of the
Quercoideae subfamily of the
Fagaceae, the beech family. Modern
molecular phylogenetics suggests the following relationships: }}
Internal phylogeny Molecular techniques for phylogenetic analysis show that the genus
Quercus consisted of
Old World and
New World clades. The entire
genome of
Quercus robur (the pedunculate oak) has been
sequenced, revealing an array of
mutations that may underlie the evolution of longevity and
disease resistance in oaks. In addition, hundreds of oak species have been compared (at
RAD-seq loci), allowing a detailed phylogeny to be constructed. However, the high signal of
introgressive hybridization (the transfer of genetic material by repeated backcrossing with hybrid offspring) in the genus has made it difficult to resolve an unambiguous, unitary history of oaks. The phylogeny from Hipp et al. 2019 is: }}
Taxonomy Taxonomic history The genus
Quercus was
circumscribed by
Carl Linnaeus in the first edition of his 1753
Species Plantarum. He described 15 species within the new genus, providing type specimens for 10 of these, and giving names but no types for
Q. cerris,
Q. coccifera,
Q. ilex,
Q. smilax, and
Q. suber. He chose
Q. robur, the pedunculate oak, as the
type species for the genus. A 2017 classification of
Quercus, based on multiple molecular phylogenetic studies, divided the genus into two
subgenera and eight
sections: • Subgenus
Quercus – the New World clade (or high-latitude clade), mostly native to North America • Section
Lobatae Loudon – North American red oaks • Section
Protobalanus (Trelease) O.Schwarz – North American intermediate oaks • Section
Ponticae Stef. – with a
disjunct distribution between western
Eurasia and western North America • Section
Virentes Loudon – American southern live oaks • Section
Quercus – white oaks from North America and Eurasia • Subgenus
Cerris Oerst. – the Old World clade (or mid-latitude clade), exclusively native to Eurasia • Section
Cyclobalanopsis Oerst. – cycle-cup oaks of East Asia • Section
Cerris Dumort. – cerris oaks of subtropical and temperate Eurasia and North Africa • Section
Ilex Loudon – ilex oaks of tropical and subtropical Eurasia and North Africa The subgenus division supports the evolutionary diversification of oaks among two distinct clades: the Old World clade (subgenus
Cerris), including oaks that diversified in
Eurasia; and the New World clade (subgenus
Quercus), oaks that diversified mainly in the
Americas.
Subgenus Quercus • Sect.
Lobatae (
synonym Erythrobalanus), the
red oaks of North America,
Central America and northern
South America.
Styles are long; the acorns mature in 18 months and taste very bitter. The inside of the acorn shell appears woolly. The actual nut is encased in a thin, clinging, papery skin. The leaves typically have sharp lobe tips, with spiny bristles at the lobe.
Subgenus Cerris The type species is
Quercus cerris. • Sect.
Cyclobalanopsis, the
ring-cupped oaks of eastern and southeastern Asia. These are evergreen trees growing tall. They are distinct from subgenus
Quercus in that they have acorns with distinctive cups bearing concrescent rings of scales; they commonly also have densely clustered acorns, though this does not apply to all of the species. Species of
Cyclobalanopsis are common in the evergreen subtropical
laurel forests, which extend from southern Japan, southern Korea, and Taiwan across southern China and northern Indochina to the eastern Himalayas, in association with trees of the genus
Castanopsis and the laurel family (
Lauraceae). • Sect.
Cerris, the
Turkey oak and its relatives of Europe and Asia. Styles are long; acorns mature in 18 months and taste very bitter. The inside of the acorn's shell is hairless. Its leaves typically have sharp lobe tips, with bristles at the lobe tip. • Sect.
Ilex, the Ilex oak and its relatives of Eurasia and northern
Africa. Styles are medium-long; acorns mature in 12–24 months, appearing hairy on the inside. The leaves are evergreen, with bristle-like extensions on the teeth. == Distribution ==