Quercus variabilis (Chinese Cork Oak)

Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Fagales
Family: Fagaceae
Genus: Quercus
Section: Cerris
Species: Q. variabilis
Binomial name: Quercus variabilis
Common Names: Chinese Cork Oak, Oriental oak.

Quercus variabilis is a species of oak native to a wide area of eastern Asia in China, Japan, and Korea. It is a medium-sized to large deciduous tree growing to 25-30 m tall with a rather open crown, and thick corky bark with deep fissures and marked by sinuous ridges.
The leaves are simple, acuminate, variable in size, 8-20 cm long and 2-8 cm broad, with a serrated margin with each vein ending in a distinctive fine hair-like tooth; they are green above and silvery below with dense short pubescence.
The flowers are wind-pollinated catkins produced in mid-spring, maturing about 18 months after pollination; the fruit is a globose acorn, 1.5-2 cm diameter, two-thirds enclosed in the acorn cup, which is densely covered in soft 4-8 mm long 'mossy' bristles.
It is cultivated in China to a small extent for cork production, though its yield is lower than that of the related Cork Oak. It is also occasionally grown as an ornamental tree.

An oak in the John Goodwin Collection, Te Henui.

Chinese Cork Oak at Lat 39 3'37.005" S Long 174 5'37.546" E Datum WGS 84
Early October.
Quercus variabilis Chinese Cork Oak-003.JPG   

New leaves early October.
Quercus variabilis Chinese Cork Oak-004.JPG

Chinese Cork Oak leavesOak Quercus variabilis Chinese Cork Oak Oriental oak-4.JPG


 

Chinese Cork Oak branch system

 

 


Chinese Cork Oak trunk and bark