Everything about Fagaceae totally explained
The family
Fagaceae, or
beech family, comprises about 900 species of both
evergreen and
deciduous trees and shrubs, which are characterized by alternate simple
leaves with pinnate venation, unisexual
flowers in the form of
catkins, and fruit in the form of cup-like (
cupule) nuts. Fagaceous leaves are often lobed and both
petioles and
stipules are generally present. Fruits lack
endosperm and lie in a scaly or spiny husk that may or may not enclose the entire nut, which may consist of one to seven seeds. The best-known group of this family is the
oaks, genus
Quercus, the fruit of which is a non-valved nut (usually containing one seed) called an acorn. The husk of the acorn in most oaks only forms a cup in which the nut sits.
Several members of the Fagaceae have important economic uses. Many species of
oak,
chestnut, and
beech (genera
Quercus,
Castanea, and
Fagus respectively) are commonly used as timber for floors, furniture, cabinets, and wine barrels. Cork for stopping wine bottles and a myriad of other uses is made from the bark of cork oak,
Quercus suber. Chestnuts, a tasty treat enjoyed by many in the winter, are the fruits from species of the genus
Castanea. Numerous species from several genera are prominent ornamentals, and wood chips from the genus
Fagus are often used in flavoring beers.
Classification
The Fagaceae are often divided into three or four subfamilies and are generally accepted to include nine or ten genera (listed below).
Monophyly of the Fagaceae is strongly supported by both
morphological (especially fruit morphology) and
molecular data.
The Southern Hemisphere genus
Nothofagus, commonly the
southern beeches, was historically placed in the Fagaceae sister to the genus
Fagus, but recent molecular evidence suggests otherwise. While
Nothofagus shares a number of common characteristics with the Fagaceae, such as cupule fruit structure, it differs significantly in a number of ways including distinct stipule and pollen morphology as well as having a different number of
chromosomes. The currently accepted view by systematic botanists is to place
Nothofagus in its own family,
Nothofagaceae.
Genera
- Castanea - Chestnuts; eight species, north temperate east Asia, southwest Asia, southeast Europe, eastern North America
- Castanopsis - chinquapins or chinkapins about 125-130 species, southeast Asia
- Chrysolepis - Golden chinkapins; two species, western USA
- Colombobalanus - one species C. excelsa, northern South America, often included in Trigonobalanus
- Fagus - Beeches; 10 species, north temperate east Asia, southwest Asia, Europe, eastern North America
- Formanodendron - one species F. doichangensis, southeast Asia, often included in Trigonobalanus
- Lithocarpus - Tanoaks or Stone oaks; about 330-340 species, all but one in warm temperate to tropical Asia, the one (L. densiflorus) in California and southwest Oregon
- Quercus - Oaks; about 500 species, widespread Northern Hemisphere, crossing the equator in Indonesia
- Trigonobalanus - one species T. verticillata, tropical southeast Asia (three species if Colombobalanus and Formanodendron included)
The
Quercus subgenus
Cyclobalanopsis is treated as a distinct genus by the
Flora of China
, but as a subgenus by most taxonomists.
The genus
Nothofagus (Southern beeches; about 35 species from the Southern Hemisphere), formerly included in the Fagaceae, is now treated in the separate family
Nothofagaceae.
Distribution
The Fagaceae are widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. Genus-level diversity is concentrated in Southeast Asia, where most of the extant genera are thought to have evolved before migrating to Europe and North America (via the
Bering Land Bridge). Members of the Fagaceae (such as
Fagus grandifolia and
Quercus alba in the Northeastern United States) are often ecologically dominant in Northern
temperate forests.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Fagaceae'.
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