Oak, Pubescent
LATIN: Quercus pubescens Willd.

Oak, Pubescent
Family : Fagaceae
Flowering Cévennes: 5 - 6 . Light: sunny. . Moisture: dry
Sample Cévenol GPS : 44°19.92' N 3°34.44' E
Status: Endemic; not under threat in this region
Habitat: (view in new page) :Key: Woods with deciduous oak on limestone.Secondary : Limestone rockfalls, Thickets on limestone in the Mediterranean, Thckets and woodland edges of cool limestone, Mixed evergreen oak and deciduous trees, Deciduous oak woods on silica, Salzmann pine as tree and wasteland shrub, Forested ravines of maples, ash and lime, Beech woods on dry limestone.

Chêne pubescent
Famille : Fagaceae
Floraison Cévennes : 5 - 6 . Lumière: ensoleillé. . . Humidité: sec
Exemple Cévenol GPS : 44°19.92' N 3°34.44' E
Statut : Endemique ; pas menacé dans ce région
Habitat : (s'ouvrir nouvelle page) :Clef : Chênaies à feuilles caduques sur calcaire. Secondaire : Eboulis calcaires, Buissons sur calcaire aux étages méditerranéens (matorrals), Buissons et lisières sur sol calcaire frais (fruticées), Chênaies vertes et mélangées à d'autres feuillus, Chênaies à feuilles caduques sur silice, Forêts et matorrals de pin de Salzmann, Forêts de ravin à érables, à frênes, à tilleuls, Hêtraies sur sol calcaire sec.
Chêne pubescent
Quercus pubescens
Oak, Pubescent
***

(modifié de Coste, Flore de la France 1937) :

Arbre peu élevé, souvent tortueux, à bois brûlant facilement; jeunes rameaux assez flexibles, pubescents.
Écologie : (répartition d'après la flore) [Quercus petraea et Quercus pubescens s'hybridisent facilement (Quercus x streimeri), surtout à la jonction de schiste et calcaire, et les populations pures sont rares dans notre région]
Bois et coteaux secs, surtout calcaires, dans tout le Midi, et çà et là dans le reste de la France.
Répartition hors de France : Europe méridionale et centrale; Asie occidentale.

Oak, Pubescent plant

(modified from Wiki):
NOTE: the French text is more complete and up-to-date

Medium-sized deciduous tree growing up to 20 m. . 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 and blunt, light brown.
Ecology UK:
France: [Quercus petraea and Quercus pubescens hybridise very easily (Quercus x streimeri), particularly at the junction of schist and limestone and pure populations are rare in our region.]
Distribution outside France:
?


Carte (c.2022) grâce à Tela Botanica

Information & Carte (c.2022) France/International grâce à INPN

Fleurs : chatons mâles lâches;
Floraison France : avril-mai, fr. septembre de la même année.

Oak, Pubescent flower

Flowers:
Flowering UK:

Feuilles : pétiolées, fermes, caduques, obovales, sinuées-lobées ou pennatifides, d'abord tomenteuses, à la fin pubescentes en dessous

Oak, Pubescent leaf

Leaves: leathery usually 4-10 cm long and 3-6 cm wide, usually widest beyond the middle. The upper leaf surface is dark green and rough, the lower light green. Both leaf surfaces are covered with minute pubescence [Hairs not stellate (some authors believe can occur). Leaf base not gradually narrowed into the long petiole, top of leaf not wider than base 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 long, stout and pubescent.

Fruit : sessiles ou à pédoncule ne dépassant pas le pétiole; cupule grise-tomenteuse, à écailles appliquées, les supérieures à pointe libre et saillante; glands ovoïdes [presque sphériques à plus allongés].

Oak, Pubescent fruit

Fruit: 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.