Oak

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Oak
Temporal range: Paleocene-Eocene boundary-Recent Template:Fossilrange possible Paleocene & Late Cretaceous records
Quercus robur.jpg
Foliage and acorns of Quercus robur
Scientific classification e
: [[Template:Taxonomy/Quercus]]
L.
Subgenera and sections

See also List of Quercus species.

An oak is a tree or shrub in the genus Quercus (/ˈkwɜːrkəs/;[1] Latin "oak tree") of the beech family, Fagaceae. There are approximately 500 extant species of oaks.[2] The common name "oak" also appears in the names of species in related genera, notably Lithocarpus (stone oaks), as well as in those of unrelated species such as Grevillea robusta (silky oaks) and the Casuarinaceae (she-oaks). The genus Quercus is native to the Northern Hemisphere and includes deciduous and evergreen species extending from cool temperate to tropical latitudes in the Americas, Asia, Europe, and North Africa. North America has the largest number of oak species, with approximately 160 species in Mexico, of which 109 are endemic and about 90 in the United States. The second greatest area of oak diversity is China, with approximately 100 species.[3]

Solitary oak, the Netherlands
The leaves of a young oak
Pubescent oak tree in four seasons, Zmajevac, Fruška Gora, Serbia

Description[edit]

Oaks have spirally arranged leaves, with lobate margins in many species; some have serrated leaves or entire leaves with smooth margins. Many deciduous species are marcescent, not dropping dead leaves until spring. In spring, a single oak tree produces both staminate ('male') flowers (in the form of catkins) and small pistillate ('female') flowers,[4] meaning that the trees are monoecious. The fruit is a nut called an acorn or oak nut borne in a cup-like structure known as a cupule; each acorn contains one seed (rarely two or three) and takes 6–18 months to mature, depending on the species. The acorns and leaves contain tannic acid,[5] which helps to guard against fungi and insects.[6] The live oaks are distinguished for being evergreen, but are not a distinct group and instead are dispersed across the genus.

Taxonomy[edit]

Linnaeus described only five species of oak from eastern North America, based on general leaf form. These were white oak (Quercus alba), chestnut oak (Q. montana), red oak (Q. rubra), willow oak (Q. phellos), and water oak (Q. nigra). Because he was dealing with confusing leaf forms, the Q. montana and Q. rubra specimens included mixed foliage of more than one species.[citation needed]

Classification[edit]

A 2017 classification of Quercus was based on multiple molecular phylogenetic studies and data, mainly originating between 2010 and 2015. The genus was divided into two subgenera and eight sections:[7]

  • Subgenus Quercus – the New World clade (or high-latitude clade), mostly native to North America
    • Section Lobatae – North American red oaks
    • Section Protobalanus – North American intermediate oaks
    • Section Ponticae – with a disjoint distribution between western Eurasia and western North America
    • Section Virentes – American southern live oaks
    • Section Quercus – white oaks from North America and Eurasia
  • Subgenus Cerris – the Old World clade (or mid-latitude clade), exclusively native to Eurasia
    • Section Cyclobalanopsis – cycle-cup oaks of East Asia
    • Section Cerris – cerris oaks of subtropical and temperate Eurasia and North Africa
    • Section Ilex – ilex oaks of tropical and subtropical Eurasia and North Africa

The subgenus division supports the evolutionary diversification of oaks among two distinct clades: the Old World clade (subgenus Cerris), including oaks that diversified in Eurasia; and the New World clade (subgenus Quercus), oaks that diversified mainly in the Americas.[8]

Subgenus Quercus[edit]

  • Sect. Lobatae (synonym Erythrobalanus), the red oaks of North America, Central America and northern South America. Styles are long; the acorns mature in 18 months and taste very bitter. The inside of the acorn shell appears woolly. The actual nut is encased in a thin, clinging, papery skin. The leaves typically have sharp lobe tips, with spiny bristles at the lobe.
  • Sect. Protobalanus, the canyon live oak and its relatives, in the southwestern United States and northwest Mexico. Styles are short; the acorns mature in 18 months and taste very bitter. The inside of the acorn shell appears woolly. The leaves typically have sharp lobe tips, with bristles at the lobe tip.
  • Sect. Ponticae, a disjunct including just two species. Styles are short, and the acorns mature in 12 months. The leaves have large stipules, high secondary venation, and are highly toothed.
  • Sect. Virentes, the southern live oaks of the Americas. Styles are short, and the acorns mature in 12 months. The leaves are evergreen or subevergreen.
  • Sect. Quercus (synonyms Lepidobalanus and Leucobalanus), the white oaks of Europe, Asia and North America. Trees or shrubs that produce nuts, specifically acorns, as fruits. Acorns mature in one year for annual trees and two years for biannual trees. Acorn is encapsulated by a spiny cupule as characterized by the family Fagaceae. Flowers in the Quercus genera produce one flower per node, with three or six styles, as well as three or six ovaries, respectively.[9] The leaves mostly lack a bristle on their lobe tips, which are usually rounded. The type species is Quercus robur.

Subgenus Cerris[edit]

  • Sect. Cyclobalanopsis, the ring-cupped oaks of eastern and southeastern Asia. These are evergreen trees growing 10–40 metres (33–131 feet) tall. They are distinct from subgenus Quercus in that they have acorns with distinctive cups bearing concrescent rings of scales; they commonly also have densely clustered acorns, though this does not apply to all of the species. Species of Cyclobalanopsis are common in the evergreen subtropical laurel forests, which extend from southern Japan, southern Korea, and Taiwan across southern China and northern Indochina to the eastern Himalayas, in association with trees of the genus Castanopsis and the laurel family (Lauraceae).
  • Sect. Cerris, the Turkey oak and its relatives of Europe and Asia. Styles are long; acorns mature in 18 months and taste very bitter. The inside of the acorn's shell is hairless. Its leaves typically have sharp lobe tips, with bristles at the lobe tip.
  • Sect. Ilex, the Ilex oak and its relatives of Eurasia and northern Africa. Styles are medium-long; acorns mature in 12–24 months, appearing hairy on the inside. The leaves are evergreen, with bristle-like extensions on the teeth.

Fossil history[edit]

Potential records of Quercus have been reported from Late Cretaceous deposits in North America and East Asia; however, these are not considered definitive. In a survey of the fossil record of Quercus it was concluded that "pre-Paleogene, and perhaps pre-Eocene occurrences of Quercus macroremains are generally represented by poorly preserved fossils that lack critical features needed for certain identification and need to be treated with caution." Amongst the oldest unequivocal records of Quercus are pollen from Austria, dating to the Paleocene-Eocene boundary, around 55 million years ago. The oldest records of Quercus in North America are from Oregon, dating to the Middle Eocene, around 44 million years ago, with the oldest records in Asia being from the Middle Eocene of Japan; both forms have affinities to the Cyclobalanopsis group.[10]

Phylogeny[edit]

The advent of molecular techniques for phylogenetic analysis transformed the understanding of oak relationships, initially by uncovering molecular support for the diphyletic division of Quercus into Old World and New World clades.[8] These techniques have proved highly useful in resolving fine-scale relationships among 2–5 oak species, particularly groups known to hybridize, but until recently, the larger emphasis on this narrow approach prevented systematists from making large-scale determinations about oak history.[11] As the capacity for sampling across wider swaths of oak species rose, so has resolution at the section and species level across the Quercus genus.[12]

Further advances in oak systematics are expected to arise from next-generation sequencing techniques, including a recent project to sequence the entire genome of Quercus robur (the pedunculate oak).[13] The recent completion of that genome has uncovered an array of mutations that may underlie the evolution of longevity and disease resistance in oaks.[14] In addition, the generation of RAD-seq loci for hundreds of oak species has allowed for the construction of the most highly detailed oak phylogeny to date. However, the high signal of introgression (by hybridization) across the tree poses difficulties for deriving an unambiguous, unitary history of oaks. The phylogeny from Hipp et al. 2019 is:[15]

Template:Clade

Ecology[edit]

Harvesting and planting acorns: a short video from Wales

Oaks are keystone species in a wide range of habitats from Mediterranean semi-desert to subtropical rainforest. For example, oak trees are important components of hardwood forests; certain species are particularly known to grow in associations with members of the Ericaceae in oak–heath forests.[16][17] Several kinds of truffles, including the two well-known varieties, the black Périgord truffle[18] and the white Piedmont truffle,[19] have symbiotic relationships with oak trees. Similarly, many other mushrooms, such as Ramaria flavosaponaria, also associate with oaks.[20][21] The European pied flycatcher is an example of an animal species that often depends upon oak trees. Oaks also support more than 900 species of caterpillars, which are an important food source for many birds.[22]

Many species of oaks are threatened with extinction in the wild, primarily due to land use changes, livestock grazing, and unsustainable harvesting. For example, over the past 200 years, large areas of oak forest in the highlands of Mexico, Central America, and the northern Andes have been cleared for coffee plantations and cattle ranching. There is a continuing threat to these forests from exploitation for timber, fuelwood, and charcoal.[23] In the US, entire oak ecosystems have declined due to a combination of factors still imperfectly known, but thought to include fire suppression, increased consumption of acorns by growing mammal populations, herbivory of seedlings, and introduced pests.[24] However, it has also been suggested that oaks as generally light-demanding trees with a relatively high tolerance for mechanic disturbances might depend on grazers like bison and the clearances they create in order to regenerate successfully, thus missing them since they were extirpated in most regions following the European colonization.[25][26]

The mature trees shed varying numbers of acorns annually. Scientists suggest that shedding excess numbers allows the oaks to satiate nut-gathering species, improving germination chances. Certain oak populations will synchronize every four to ten years to produce almost no acorns at all, only to rain them down excessively the following year, known as a mast year. The year preceding the mast year is thought to starve off the mammal populations feeding on the supply, thereby increasing the effectiveness of the overproduction in the following mast year.[27][28][better source needed] This is necessary to the survival of any given oak species, as only one in 10,000 acorns results in an eventual tree.[29]

Hybridization[edit]

A hybrid white oak, possibly Quercus stellata × Q. muehlenbergii

Interspecific hybridization is quite common among oaks, but usually between species within the same section only,[30] and most common in the white oak group. White oaks cannot discriminate against pollination by other species in the same section. Because they are wind pollinated and have weak internal barriers to hybridization, hybridization produces functional seeds and fertile hybrid offspring.[31] Ecological stresses, especially near habitat margins, can also cause a breakdown of mate recognition as well as a reduction of male function (pollen quantity and quality) in one parent species.[31][32]

Frequent hybridization among oaks has consequences for oak populations around the world; most notably, hybridization has produced large populations of hybrids with copious amounts of introgression and the evolution of new species.[33] Frequent hybridization and high levels of introgression have caused different species in the same populations to share up to 50% of their genetic information.[34] Having high rates of hybridization and introgression produces genetic data that often does not differentiate between two clearly morphologically distinct species, but instead differentiates populations.[35] Research suggests that the maintenance of particular loci for adaptation to ecological niches might explain the retention of species identity despite significant gene flow.[36]

The Fagaceae, or beech family, to which the oaks belong, is a very slow evolving clade compared to other angiosperms,[37][38] and the patterns of hybridization and introgression in Quercus pose a significant challenge to the concept of a species since a species is often defined as a group of "actually or potentially interbreeding populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups."[39] By this definition, many species of Quercus would be lumped together according to their geographic and ecological habitat, despite clear distinctions in morphology and, to a large extent, genetic data.

Diseases and pests[edit]

Oak powdery mildew on pedunculate oak

Sudden oak death (Phytophthora ramorum) is a water mould that can kill oaks within just a few weeks. Oak wilt, caused by the fungus Bretziella fagacearum is also a lethal disease of some oaks, particularly the red oaks (the white oaks can be infected but generally live longer). Other dangers include wood-boring beetles, as well as root rot in older trees, which may not be apparent on the outside, often being discovered only when the trees come down in a strong gale. Oak apples are galls on oaks made by the gall wasp. The female kermes scale causes galls to grow on kermes oak. Oaks are used as food plants by the larvae of Lepidoptera (butterfly and moth) species such as the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, which can defoliate oak and other broadleaved tree species in North America.[40]

Many galls are found on oak leaves, buds, flowers, roots, etc. Examples are oak artichoke gall, oak marble gall, oak apple gall, knopper gall, and spangle gall.

Several species of fungus cause powdery mildew on oak species. In Europe, the species Erysiphe alphitoides is the most common cause.[41]

A new and yet little-understood disease of mature oaks, acute oak decline, has been reported in parts of the UK since 2009.[42]

The oak processionary moth (Thaumetopoea processionea) has become a serious threat in the UK since 2006. The caterpillars of this species defoliate the trees and are hazardous to human health; their bodies are covered with poisonous hairs, which can cause rashes and respiratory problems.[43]

In California, oaks are affected by the fungal disease foamy bark canker.

The eastern grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) is native to North America and a foreign species across Europe, where they are known to strip the bark off of a variety of large trees, including oaks. Bark stripping can result in the death of the leading shoot and decreased crown size.[44]

Toxicity[edit]

The leaves and acorns of the oak tree are poisonous in large amounts to livestock, including cattle, horses, sheep, and goats due to the toxin tannic acid, causing kidney damage and gastroenteritis. Symptoms of poisoning include lack of appetite, depression, constipation, diarrhea (which may contain blood), blood in urine, and colic. The exception is the domestic pig, which may be fed entirely on acorns in the right conditions, and has traditionally been pastured in oak woodlands (such as the Spanish dehesa and the English system of pannage).

Acorns are also edible by humans, after leaching of the tannins.[45]

Uses[edit]

Heart of oak beams of the frame of the Église Saint-Girons in Monein, France
Great Bed of Ware, 1590–1600, carved oak

Oak wood has a density of about 750 kg/m3 (0.43 oz/cu in) creating great strength and hardness. The wood is very resistant to insect and fungal attacks because of its high tannin content. It also has very appealing grain markings, particularly when quartersawn.

Oak planking was common on high-status Viking longships in the 9th and 10th centuries. The wood was hewn from green logs, by axe and wedge, to produce radial planks, similar to quarter-sawn timber. Wide, quarter-sawn boards of oak have been prized since the Middle Ages for use in interior panelling of prestigious buildings such as the debating chamber of the House of Commons in London and in the construction of fine furniture. Oak wood, from Quercus robur and Quercus petraea, was used in Europe for the construction of ships, especially naval men of war,[46] until the 19th century, and was the principal timber used in the construction of European timber-framed buildings. Today oak wood is still commonly used for furniture making and flooring, timber-frame buildings, and veneer production.

Japanese oak is used for professional drums made by Yamaha Drums. The higher density of oak gives the drum a brighter and louder tone compared to traditional materials such as maple and birch.

In hill states of India, besides fuelwood and timber, the locals use oak wood for agricultural implements. The leaves are used as fodder for livestock during lean periods.[47][48]

Of the North American red oaks, the northern red oak is one of the most prized for lumber and is marketed as red oak regardless of species. This wood has open capillaries, and air blown through an end grain piece 10 inches long can send bubbles out the other end into a glass of water. The openings give fungus easy access when the finish deteriorates, and natural red oak rots easily outdoors. However, if the wood is treated with a preservative compound, the capillaries absorb it deeply, and treated red oak will resist rotting better than cured white oak heartwood, which has a closed cell structure. Shumard oak, a member of the red oak subgenus, provides timber described as "mechanically superior" to northern red oak. Cherrybark oak is another type of red oak that provides excellent timber.

The standard lumber tree of the white oak group – all marketed as white oak – is Quercus alba. White oak is often used to make wine barrels. The wood of the deciduous pedunculate oak and sessile oak accounts for most European oak production, but evergreen species such as Holm oak and cork oak also produce valuable timber.

Oak bark is also rich in tannin, and is used by tanners for tanning leather.

Oak galls were used for centuries as a main ingredient in iron gall ink for manuscripts, harvested at a specific time of year.[49] In Korea, oak bark is used to make shingles for traditional roof construction.

Culinary[edit]

Sherry maturing in oak barrels

Barrels for aging wines, sherry, and spirits such as brandy, Irish whiskey, Scotch whisky and Bourbon whiskey, are made from European and American oak, with single barrel whiskey fetching a premium. The use of oak in wine can add gustatory dimensions depending on the type of oak. Oak barrels, which may be charred before use, contribute to their potable contents' colour, taste, and aroma, imparting a desirable oaky vanillin flavour. A dilemma for wine producers is to choose between French and American oakwoods. French oaks (Quercus robur, Q. petraea) give greater refinement and are chosen for the best, most expensive wines. American oak contributes greater texture and resistance to ageing but produces a more powerful bouquet.[citation needed]

A cross section of the trunk of a cork oak, Quercus suber

Oak wood chips are also used for smoking fish, meat, cheeses,[50] and other foods.

The bark of the cork oak is used to produce wine stoppers (corks). This species grows around the Mediterranean Sea, with Portugal, Spain, Algeria, and Morocco producing most of the world's supply.

The bark of the white oak is dried and used in medical preparations. Acorns are used for making flour or roasted for acorn coffee.

Oak forest in Estonia
Oak on sandy earth
Oak forest on the beach in Njivice, Croatia

Conservation[edit]

According to a comprehensive report by The Morton Arboretum and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), an estimated 31% of the world's estimated 430 oak species are threatened with extinction; in comparison, the study found an estimated 41% of oak species to be of conservation concern.[51][52]

The countries with the highest numbers of threatened oak species, according to the report, are China with 36 species, Mexico with 32 species, Vietnam with 20 species, and the US with 16 species. While the cause of decline is still partly unknown for some species, the leading causes the scientists determined were climate change and invasive pests in the US, and deforestation and urbanization in Asia.

In the Himalayan region of India, oak forests are being invaded by pine forests due to the increase in temperature. The associated pine forest species may cross frontiers and become new elements of the oak forests.[53]

In eastern North America, rare species of oak trees include scarlet oak (Quercus coccinea), chinquapin oak (Quercus muehlenbergii), and post oak (Quercus stellata).[28]

Culture[edit]

Symbols[edit]

National[edit]

The oak is a common symbol of strength and endurance and has been chosen as the national tree of many countries. In England, oaks have been a national symbol since at least the sixteenth century, often used by Shakespeare to convey heritage and power. In England today, they remain a symbol of the nation's history, traditions, and the beauty of its countryside. Already an ancient Germanic symbol (in the form of the Donar Oak, for instance), certainly since the early nineteenth century, it stands for the nation of Germany, and oak branches are thus displayed on some German coins, both of the former Deutsche Mark and the current euro currency.[54] In 2004 the Arbor Day Foundation[55] held a vote for the official National Tree of the United States of America. In November 2004, the United States Congress passed legislation designating the oak as America's National Tree.[56]

Other countries have also designated the oak as their national tree, including Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus (golden oak), Estonia, France, Germany, Moldova, Jordan, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Serbia, and Wales.[57]

Regional and state[edit]

The oak in the former coat of arms of Ekenäs
The oak in the coat of arms of Gornji Milanovac, Serbia

In Colombia, the oak tree is an insignia of the Department of Boyacá. In 2008, the Flag of Boyacá Department was amended to include five oak leaves.[58]

Military[edit]

Oak leaves are traditionally an important part of German Army regalia.[citation needed] The Nazi party used the traditional German eagle, standing atop a swastika inside a wreath of oak leaves. It is also known as the Iron Eagle. During the Third Reich of Nazi Germany, oak leaves were used for military valor decoration on the Knights Cross of the Iron Cross.

They also symbolize rank in the United States Armed Forces. A gold oak leaf indicates an O-4 (major or lieutenant commander). In contrast, a silver oak leaf indicates an O-5 (lieutenant colonel or commander). Arrangements of oak leaves, acorns, and sprigs indicate different branches of the United States Navy staff corps officers.[59] Oak leaves are embroidered onto the covers (hats) worn by field grade officers and flag officers in the United States armed services. If a member of the United States Army or Air Force earns multiple awards of the same medal, then instead of wearing a ribbon or medal for each award, they wear one metal representation of an "oak leaf cluster" attached to the appropriate ribbon for each subsequent award.[60]

Political[edit]

The oak tree is used as a symbol by several political parties. It is the symbol of Toryism (on account of the Royal Oak) and the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom,[61] and formerly of the Progressive Democrats in Ireland[62] and the Democrats of the Left in Italy. In the cultural arena, the oakleaf is the symbol of the National Trust (UK), The Woodland Trust, and The Royal Oak Foundation.[59]

Religion[edit]

Grīdnieku ancient oak in Rumbas parish, Latvia, girth 8.27 m, 2015

The prehistoric Indo-European tribes worshiped the oak and connected it with a thunder or lightning god, and this tradition descended to many classical cultures.

In Greek mythology, the oak is the tree sacred to Zeus, king of the gods. In Zeus's oracle in Dodona, Epirus, the sacred oak was the centerpiece of the precinct, and the priests would divine the pronouncements of the god by interpreting the rustling of the oak's leaves.[63] Mortals who destroyed such trees were said to be punished by the gods since the ancient Greeks believed beings called hamadryads inhabit them.[64]

In Celtic polytheism, the name of the oak tree was part of the Proto-Celtic word for 'druid': *derwo-weyd- > *druwid-; however, Proto-Celtic *derwo- (and *dru-) can also be adjectives for 'strong' and 'firm', so Ranko Matasovic interprets that *druwid- may mean 'strong knowledge'. As in other Indo-European faiths, Taranis, being a thunder god, was associated with the oak tree.[citation needed] "Tree" and drus may also be cognate with "druid", the Celtic priest to whom the oak was sacred. There has even been a study that shows that oaks are more likely to be struck by lightning than any other tree of the same height.[65]

In Norse mythology, the oak was sacred to the thunder god, Thor.[66] Thor's Oak was a sacred tree of the Germanic Chatti tribe.[citation needed]

In Baltic and Slavic mythology, the oak was the sacred tree of Latvian god Pērkons, Lithuanian Perkūnas, Prussian Perkūns and Slavic Perun,[67] the god of thunder and one of the most important deities.

The oak also appears in the Hebrew tradition. In the Bible, the oak tree at Shechem is the site where Jacob buries the foreign gods of his people (Gen. 35:4). Also, Joshua erects a stone under an oak tree as the first covenant of Yahweh, the god of Israel (Josh. 24.25–7). In Isaiah 61, the prophet refers to the Israelites as "Oaks of Righteousness". Absalom's long hair (2 Samuel 18:9) gets caught in an oak tree, allowing Joab to kill him.

Veneration of the oak survives in Serbian Orthodox Church tradition. Christmas celebrations include the badnjak, a branch taken from a young and straight oak ceremonially felled early on Christmas Eve morning, similar to a yule log. In recent times, only the branches are collected, brought home, and ceremoniously thrown into a stove or church bonfire. In another tradition, a zapis (lit. "inscription") is an old, isolated oak on a hilltop or promontory, often inscribed with a cross by a parish priest. Reverence for zapisi probably originated in pre-Christian times, and they long remained places of public gathering and even of Christian worship where churches were not available. For example, in 1815, at a zapis assembly in Takovo, knez Miloš Obrenović declared the start of the Second Serbian Uprising. Even in modern times, cutting down zapis oaks can result in public outcry, even for projects like road building.[68]

History[edit]

Several oak trees, such as the Royal Oak in Britain, the Charter Oak in the United States, and the Guernica oak in the Basque Country are of great historical or cultural importance.

Beneath the shady boughs of the Quercus calliprinos

"The Proscribed Royalist, 1651", a famous painting by John Everett Millais, depicted a Royalist fleeing from Cromwell's forces and hidden in an oak. Millais painted the picture in Hayes, Kent, from a local oak tree that became known as the Millais Oak.[69][70]

Approximately 50 km west of Toronto, Canada is the town of Oakville, Ontario, famous for its history as a shipbuilding port on Lake Ontario.[clarification needed]

The city of Raleigh, N.C., is known as the "City of Oaks".

The Jurupa Oak tree – a clonal colony of Quercus palmeri or Palmer's oak found in Riverside County, California – is an estimated 13,000 years old.[71]

There are different types of oak trees, some large groups of very old oak trees are rare and some are distinctive trees.[72]


In the Roman Republic, a crown of oak leaves was given to those who had saved the life of a citizen in battle; it was called the "civic oak crown".[65]

Famous specimens[edit]

Category: Individual oak trees
  • The Emancipation Oak is designated one of the 10 Great Trees of the World by the National Geographic Society. It is part of the National Historic Landmark district of Hampton University in Virginia.
  • The Ivenack Oak, which is one of the largest trees in Europe, is located in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany, and is approximately 800 years old.[73]
  • The Bowthorpe Oak, located in Bourne, Lincolnshire, is thought to be 1,000 years old. It was featured in the Guinness Book of World Records and was filmed for a TV documentary for its astonishing longevity.[73]
  • The Minchenden (or Chandos) Oak, in Southgate, London, is said to be the largest oak tree in England (already 8.2 m or 27 ft in girth in the nineteenth century), and is perhaps 800 years old.[74]
  • The Seven Sisters Oak is the largest certified southern live oak tree. Located in Mandeville, Louisiana, it is estimated to be up to 1,500 years old with a trunk that measures 11.6 m (38 ft).[75][76]
  • The Major Oak is an 800- to 1000-year-old tree located in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire. According to folklore, it was used by Robin Hood for shelter.
  • Friendship Oak is a 500-year-old southern live oak located in Long Beach, Mississippi.
  • The Crouch Oak is believed to have originated in the 11th century and is located in Addlestone, Surrey. It is an important town symbol, with many local businesses adopting its name. It marked the boundary of Windsor Great Park. Legend says that Queen Elizabeth I stopped by it and had a picnic.
  • The Angel Oak is a southern live oak located in Angel Oak Park on John's Island near Charleston, South Carolina. The Angel Oak is estimated to be over 400–500 years old, stands 20.3 m (66+12 ft) tall, and measures 8.5 m (28 ft) in circumference.
  • The Kaiser's Oak, located at the village of Gommecourt in Artois, France, named in honour of Kaiser Wilhelm II, symbolically marked from late 1914 to April 1917 the furthest point in the West of the German Imperial Army during World War I.
  • The Wye Oak in Maryland was the United States' largest white oak tree before it blew down in a storm in 2002 at an estimated age of 460 years.
  • The Bland Oak in Sydney, Australia, planted in the 1840s, was the largest tree in Australia until it was split in a storm early on New Year's Day 1941.
  • The Treaty Oak in Austin, Texas, is a Texas live oak and the last surviving member of the Council Oaks, a grove of 14 trees that served as a sacred meeting place for Comanche and Tonkawa tribes before European settlement of the area.
  • The Wilberforce Oak was a pollard pedunculate oak in Keston, Kent, under which William Wilberforce resolved to propose the abolition of the slave trade to the House of Commons in 1787. The original was a hollow shell by 1969; its young replacement blew down in the Great Storm of 1987, and the third-generation oak now stands in its place.
  • The Tree That Owns Itself in Athens, Georgia is a White Oak that, it is falsely claimed, has legally obtained ownership of the land it sits on and itself.

References[edit]

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  2. "Plants of the world online". www.DoorStain.com. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
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Cite error: <ref> tag with name "powo" defined in <references> is not used in prior text.

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External links[edit]

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