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Quercus serrata is a deciduous oak tree reaching a height of 25 metres (82 feet) occupying elevations from 100–2,000 m (330–6,560 ft). The bark is gray or reddish-brown with longitudinal furrows. [5]
Quercus serrata Murray – bao li – # China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea; Quercus shennongii C.C.Huang & S.H.Fu – southeastern China; Quercus shingjenensis Y.T.Chang – China (Guizhou) Quercus similis Ashe – swamp post oak – southeastern North America; Quercus sinuata Walter – bastard oak – southern US (formerly identified as Quercus ...
Dipsas orientalis Murray, 1875; Ruralis orientalis chosenicola Bryk, 1946; ... Quercus serrata, Quercus dentata, Quercus acutissima, Quercus variabilis and Fabaceae. [1]
Q. serrata may refer to: Quercus serrata, the bao li, an East Asian species of tree native to China (including Taiwan), Japan and Korea;
In the 1700s, a young botanist scandalized some by discussing “birds and bees” of pollination, and awarding Latin names to plants and animals.
The oak ambrosia beetle bores into sapwood and heartwood of host oaks commonly including Q. crispula and Quercus serrata. [2] Once infected, these trees wilt and die, paralleling the effects of Dutch elm disease. [2] [3] [5] The oak ambrosia beetle carries not only the pathogen itself, but also dietary fungus symbionts in mycangia.
The climate is cooler in the north of Honshu than the south, with deciduous mixed trees typified by Japanese beech (Fagus crenata), Jolcham oak (Quercus serrata), Castanopsis sieboldii, Picea jezoensis, Pinus thunbergii, Pinus pumila, Prunus nipponica, Cryptomeria japonica, Sciadopitys verticillata, Salix pierotii, Camphora officinarum, Cercidiphyllum japonicum, Fagus crenata, Carpinus ...
In the northern portion of the ecoregion, common trees include the oaks Quercus mongolica and Quercus serrata, along with Acer mono, birch , hornbeam (Carpinus), Celtis sinensis, Korean ash (Fraxinus chinensis var. rhynchophylla), walnut (Juglans mandshurica), Maackia amurensis, Platycarya strobilacea, Prunus padus, Pyrus ussuriensis, willows ...