354 FAGACEAE 



shallow; nuts thick dvate, obtuse, IY2 inches long, 1 to IVs inches thick. — 

 (Folia 3 ad 4 lin. longa, ptene eiusdem latitudinis, sinibus acutis sed plerumque 

 brevibus; cupula magna, 1 poll, lata, sed brevis; glandes erassa? ovatte obtusffi, 

 1% poll- longa\ 1 ad 1% poll. lata^). — Kaweah River basin, 4,600 feet altitude, 

 Walter Fry. 



Var. turbinata Jepsou n. var. Tall trees with larger, mo.stly deeply lobed 

 leaves and more open sinuses than in the type : nuts inversely top-shaped and 

 set in shallow cups with .scales not so strongly tuberculate. — (Ai-bor magna 

 alta; folia maiora plerumciue profunde lobata, sinibus ampliorilius quam in 

 typo; glans turbinata inversa forma; cupula brevis squamis minoribus tuber- 

 C'lilatis).— Little Lake Valley, W.L.J, nos. 2403, 2404. 



Refs. — QuERCUS LOB.4.TA Nee, An. Ciene. Nat. vol. 3, p. 277 (LSOl). type from tlie Mon- 

 terey region; Greene, Erythea, vol. 2, p. 64 (1894); Shinn, Garil. & For. vol. 10, p. 52, fig. 8 

 (1897); Pnrdy, Gard. &'For. vol. 10, p. 202, figs. 2.5, 26 (1897); .Tepson, Erythea, vol. 7, p. 

 131 (1899), Fl. W. Mid. Cal. p. 142 (1901). Q. Mndsii Bentham, Bot. Sulphur, p. 5.5 (1844), 

 cited as from San Francisco where it does not grow; the label on type in the Kew Herbarium 

 reads ' ' San Francisco-Rio Sacramento, ' ' indicating clearly that it was collected on the lower 

 Sacramento River expedition of the Sulphur by Rinds; Newberry, Pac. R. Rep. vol. 6, pt. 3, 

 p. 29, pi. 1, fig. 7 (1S57). 



2. Q. garryana Dougl. Oregon Oak. Tree 25 to 55 feet hiuh. the trunlc 

 1 1/2 to 5 feet in diameter and dividing into wide-spreading limbs which sup- 

 port a broad rounded crown 30 to 60 feet in diameter ; trunk bark white, 

 thin (I'o inch thick), smoothish, but on typical trunks superficially fissured 

 into longitudinal hands which are transversely checked into small squarish 

 scales 1 inch or less in diameter; leaves 3 to 4 or 6 inches long, li/> to 3i/o 

 inches broad, dark lustrous green and subglabrous on the upper surface, rusty 

 or pale, finely pubescent and yellow-veined beneath, leathery in texture and 

 ]iai'ted into 5 to 7, or rarely 9, lobes with mostly deep and often acute sinuses; 

 lobes entire or with 2 or 3 coarse rounded unequal teeth; staminate catkins 

 hirsute; stamens 4 to 6; pistillate flowers sessile or short -peckmculate; acorns 

 maturing in first autumn ; cup saucer-shaped, 6 to 9 lines broad, with tubercu- 

 late scales; nut bulging beyond the small cup, typically subglobose but varying 

 to obovoid or subcylindric, although always rounded at apex. % to I14 inches 

 long, % to 1 inch thick, its surface polished and shining. 



Coast Ranges: Santa Cruz Mts. ; Mt. Tamalpais, north slope; mountain 

 slopes on both sides of Santa Rosa, Russian River and Ukiah valleys ; abundant 

 on all the higher mountains from Ridgewood. Willits, Sherwood. Cummings, 

 BelFs Springs and Round Valley north to Siskiyou Co., mostly from 1,500 to 

 4.000 feet. As.sociated with Douglas Fir, ]\Iadrona and Black Oak (cf. Fig. 

 8) ; not in main Redwood Belt. Far north to Washington and British Columbia 

 where it is the only oak. Wood used for shipbuilding and interior finish in 

 Oregon. Also called Post Oak and Garry Oak. 



Var. semota Jepson n. var. Leaves pinnatifid, the sinuses rather sharp, 3 to 

 4 inches long. 1% to 214 inches broad; cup shallow, scale tips thin, only slightly 

 or somewhat tuberculate at base; nuts oval, 10 to 13 lines long. — (Folia pin- 

 natifida sinibus subincisis, 3 ad 4 poll, longa, 1% ad 21/4 poll, lata; cupula 

 brevis, apieibus squamarum tenuibus, basi subtuberculatis; glans ovalis, 10 ad 

 13 lin. longa). — Southern Sierra Nevada from the Kaweah Basin (tj'pe loe. 

 5,000 feet) northward to Mariposa. Scarcely different save in size and here- 

 tofore referred by authors to Q. breweri. 



Var. breweri Jepson, n. comb. (Q. breweri Engehn.) Brewer Oak. Spread- 



