Species

Quercus obtusata Bonpl.

LC

Synonyms (8)

alvarezensis atriglans crenatifolia hartwegii pandurata panduriformis rugosa sensu Trel., not Née spicata
Data from Oaks of the World

Geographic Range

Mexico (Aguascalientes, Guerrero, Durango, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Mexico, Michoacan, Morales, Nayarit, Oaxaca, Puebla, Queretaro, San Luis Potosi, Tlaxcala, Veracruz, Zacatecas); 1400-2800 m;

Growth Habit

7-12 (20) m tall; trunk to 40-60 cm in diameter;

Leaves

6-16 x 4-8 cm ; deciduous ; thick, subcoriaceous or coriaceous; more or less broadly oboval to elliptic; flat, sometimes slightly convex; apex rounded or obtuse, mucronate; base rounded to cordate; margin flat or slightly revolute, crenate rather than dentate (if so, 3-8 pairs of teeth in the distal 2/3 ending in a short, stout mucro, bending toward the abaxial side), seldom entire; olive green, lustrous above, with fascicled, stellate and simple glandular hairs mainly at base of midrib, glabrescent; beneath pale green, dull, tomentose mostly on veins (tomentum made of 5-8 rays fascicled, sessile or not, trichomes, and abundant amber or reddish glandular hairs, and abundant glandular secretions); 7-12 vein pairs slightly impressed above; epidermis whitish-papillose, remotely bullate; petiole glabrescent 5-12 mm;

Flowers

in April-May; staminate inflorescences 3-10 cm long, with numerous flowers; pistillate flowers pubescent, 3 to 6 or more, near the tip of a pubescent, 3-4 cm long peduncle;

Fruits

acorn 1-2 cm long, globose, sometimes ovoid; apex rounded, mucronate; single or 2 to 5 together ; peduncle slender, hairy, 2-3 cm long; enclosed 1/3 by cup; cup half-round 1.5-1.8 cm in diameter, with loose, appressed, grey tomentose scales with apex acute and base swollen ; maturing in 1 year from September to November; edible;

Common Names

encino calicahuac encino cosahuicahuatl uricua charari tocuz

Hardiness & Habitat

zone 8;

Additional Information

– A. Camus : n° 233 ; – Sub-genus Quercus, Section Quercus, Series Leucomexicanae; – Q. alvarezensis is, for Govaerts (2007) synonym of Q. rugosa Née… – Q.spicata Sm 1919 is actually Lithocarpus spicatus (Sm) Rehd. 1919 – Resembles Q. potosina which has smaller leaves (3-10 x 2-6 cm); resembles too Q. rugosa , but this one has a convex leaf strongly coriaceous, a revolute margin, the epidermis bullate; as well, one can differenciate Q. obtusata from Q. laeta which has foliar underside pale glaucous, without masses of glandular secretions, rare glandular trichomes, a leaf more oblong than oboval with a margin sometimes entire; Q. xylina differs in having a revolute leaf margin, a longer floral peduncle (4-10 cm) bearing more fruits. ( See all differences HERE ).

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