BTCV : CVNI : Tree Nursery : About Trees : Pedunculate Oak

Pedunculate Oak

The male flowers (catkins) in early MayIrish Name - Dair ghallda
Family - Fagaceae

Characteristics

  • Pedunculate oak is a large slow-growing tree, reaching up to 30m (90ft), occasionally more at maturity.
  • The leaves, with 4-5 usually unequal lobes on each side, are carried on very short leaf stalks.
  • The male flowers are borne in slender catkins; the females in spiked stalks.
  • Acorns are borne on long stalks or "peduncles."
  • The thick bark protects older oaks during fire; even young oaks will usually regenerate from the base.

Season

  • Young leaves and flowers open mid-April to mid-May.
  • The oak has a second flush of growth known traditionally as the Lammas growth since it tends to coincide with the Celtic Lammas Festival on August 1.
  • The acorns ripen in October.
  • Pedunculate oak tends to fruit abundantly only every few years. The crop is largely determined by the climatic conditions of the previous year at the time of bud burst.
  • Leaves fall in late October and early November.

Preferred Environment

  • Pedunculate oak generally occurs in the lowlands.
  • This oak is found on heavy clays and loams, particularly where the soil is neutral or alkaline.
  • It is not tolerant of salt-laden winds, thus is uncommon in maritime environments.
  • The pedunculate oak is the dominant woodland tree on suitable soils and was very common throughout Ireland before being cleared for agriculture.

Wildlife Associations

  • Approximately 284 identified insect species are associated with pedunculate oak.
  • Pedunculate oak is considered beneficial to more species than most other native trees.
  • In autumn, disc-like spangle-gall often covers the underside of the leaves.

Uses

  • Oak timber has been used in Irish construction for 7,200 years.
  • The tanning industry has historically used the bark in their processes.
 
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