CHECK LIST OF FOREST TREES 97 



♦Quercus wislizenii A. de Candolle. 85 Highland Live Oak. 



Range. — From northern California (lower slopes Mount Shasta and south- 

 ward through the coast region to Santa Lucia Mountains, Santa Rosa and Santa 

 Cruz Islands, and lower slopes of Sierra Nevada to Tijon Pass, San Bernardino, 

 San Jacinto, and Cuyaniaca Mountains) to Lower California (Mount San Pedro 

 Martir). 



NAMES IX USE 



Live Oak (Calif.). Sierra Live Oak (hort.). 



Highland Live Oak (Calif.). Black Live Oak. 



Interior Live Oak (Calif, lit.). Wislizenus Oak 



X Quercus morehus Kellogg. Evergreen Black Oak (Hybrid). 



Range. — California (Northern Coast Ranges and Sierra Nevada foothills in 

 Marin, Sonoma, Mendocino, Yuba, Placer, Lake, Butte, Eldorado, Sacramento, 

 Amador, Calaveras, Tuolumne, Mariposa, Madera, Tulare, Fresno, and San 

 Bernardino Counties). 



Note on nomenclature. — Supposed to be a hybrid between Quercus wislizenii 

 A. de Candolle and Quercus kelloggii Newberry. 



NAMES IN USE 



Abrams Oak (Calif.). Moreh Oak (Calif.). 



Evergreen Black Oak (Calif.), Morehus Oak (lit.). 



Spanish Oak (Calif.). 



Quercus myrtifolia Wilklenow. Myrtle Oak. 



Range. — From South Carolina (on coast and islands) to eastern Florida (Bis- 

 cayne Bay/; westward, crossing central Florida, and from the Caloosahatchee 

 River, in the coast region of Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi. 



names in use 



Myrtle Oak (lit.). Scrub Oak (lit.). 



Sea-side Scrub Oak (South Atlantic). 



*Quercus agrifolia Nee. Coast Live Oak. 



Range. — From northern California (Sonoma County and along the coast 

 ranges and islands) to Lower California (Mount San Pedro Martir). 



NAMES IN USE 



Coast Live Oak (Calif.). Encina (Calif.). 



California Live Oak (Calif., and hort.). Evergreen Oak (Calif.). 



Quercus pricei Sudworth. 88 Coast Live Oak. 



Range. — California (Monterey County). 



NAMES IN USE 



Price Oak (lit.). Coast Live Oak. 



Live Oak. 



,J A shrubby form of this species, Quercus wislizenii frutetcens Englemann, occurs as far south as Lower 

 California. 



« Forest Trees of the Pacific Slope, 309, Fig. 143, 1908. This oak appears to be closely related to Quercus 

 agrifoUa Nee and to Quercus wish zenii A. de Candolle, from both of which it differs in not having the edges 

 ■f the shallow thin cups infolded, the infolded edges of the cups being characteristic of Quercus agrifoUa 

 and more or less of Quercus wislizenii. 



