Gardening Magazine

Plant of the Week: Quercus Myrsinifolia

By Davis Landscape Architecture @DavisLandArch
Quercus myrsinifolia Leaf (18/02/2012/ Kew, London)

Quercus myrsinifolia Leaf (18/02/2012/ Kew, London)

Position: Full sun

Flowering period: Spring

Soil: Moist, well drained

Eventual Height: 12m

Eventual Spread: 10m

Hardiness: 7a – 11

Family: Fagaceae

Quercus myrsinifolia is a small, rounded, evergreen tree, occasionally multi stemmed. Its leathery, hairless leaves are narrow, lanceolate, up to 12cm long, dark green above and slightly glaucous beneath. The newly emerged leaves are purple/ bronze in color. The bark is dark, pinkish grey, smooth, occasionally with thin orangish furrows. The flowers are pistillate flowers on young shoots, with 2 to 6 being borne on a slender penduncle . The fruit is an acorn, up to 2cm long and 1.5cm wide, being borne in clusters of 2 to 6 on a long penduncle.

Quercus myrsinifolia (18/02/2012/ Kew, London)

Quercus myrsinifolia (18/02/2012/ Kew, London)

Quercus myrsinifolia, commonly known as the Bamboo leaf Oak, Chinese Evergreen Oak, and Chinese Ring Cupped Oak, is native to east and central southeast China, Japan, Korea, and north south east Asia.

The etymological root of the binomial name Quercus is the Latin name for an Oak tree, sometimes authorities derive the word from Celtic, ‘quer’ meaning fine, and ‘cuez’ a tree. Myrsinifolia is derived from the name of the  Myrsine genus and the Latin folium ‘leaf’.

The landscape architect may find Quercus myrsinifolia useful as an attractive small evergreen specimen tree. This tree is not liked by rabbits and deer.

Ecologically, Q. myrsinifolia does not provide much ecological benefit for wildlife in the UK.

Q. myrsinifolia prefers moist, fertile, well-drained soils. It tolerates most pH of soil.

Q. myrsinifolia requires little maintenance.


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