Taxon: Fagus sylvatica L.
Genus: Fagus subgenus: Fagus
Family: Fagaceae subfamily: Fagoideae.
Nomen number: 16557
Place of publication: Sp. pl. 2:998. 1753
Typification: View record from Linnaean Plant Name Typification Project
of the Natural History Museum of London.
Name verified on: 17-May-1995 by ARS Systematic Botanists. Last updated: 05-Mar-2003
Species priority site is: National Arboretum (NA). Accessions:
3 in National Plant Germplasm System.
Check PlantSearch
database of Botanic Gardens
Conservation International for possible non-NPGS germplasm.
See also subordinate taxa:
- Balkan beech (Source: J Evol Biol
12:746.) – English [Fagus sylvatica subsp. moesiaca]
- beech (Source: BSBI
) – English
- common beech (Source: Dict Gard
) – English [Fagus sylvatica subsp. sylvatica]
- European beech (Source: World Econ Pl
) – English [Fagus sylvatica subsp. sylvatica]
- Oriental beech (Source: Pl Book
) – English [Fagus sylvatica subsp. orientalis]
- Turkish beech (Source: Pl Book
) – English [Fagus sylvatica subsp. orientalis]
- faggio (Source: Mult Glossary Trees
) – Italian
- faia-européia (Source: D. Groth, p.c. 2005 [as F. orientalis]) – Portuguese (Brazil) [Fagus sylvatica subsp. orientalis]
- faia-vermelha (Source: D. Groth, p.c. 2005 [as F. orientalis]) – Portuguese (Brazil) [Fagus sylvatica subsp. orientalis]
- bok (Source: Vara kulturvaxt namn
) – Swedish
- orientbok (Source: Vara kulturvaxt namn
) – Swedish [Fagus sylvatica subsp. orientalis]
- More:
Native:
- ASIA-TEMPERATE
Western Asia: Iran; Turkey Caucasus: Armenia; Azerbaijan; Georgia; Russian Federation - Krasnodar
- EUROPE
Northern Europe: Denmark; Norway [s.]; Sweden [s.]; United Kingdom - England [s.] Middle Europe: Austria; Belgium; Czechoslovakia; Germany; Hungary; Netherlands; Poland; Switzerland East Europe: Ukraine [w.] Southeastern Europe: Albania; Bulgaria; Former Yugoslavia; Greece; Italy [incl. Sicily]; Romania Southwestern Europe: France [incl. Corsica]; Spain [n.]
- Aldén, B., S. Ryman & M. Hjertson.
2009. Våra kulturväxters namn - ursprung och användning. Formas, Stockholm (Handbook on Swedish cultivated and utility plants, their names and origin).
- Botanical Society of the British Isles.
BSBI taxon database (on-line resource).
- Cooper, M. R. & A. W. Johnson.
1998. Poisonous plants and fungi in Britain: animal and human poisoning.
[poisonous].
- Denk, T. et al.
2002. The evolutionary history of Fagus in western Eurasia: Evidence from genes, morphology and the fossil record.
Pl. Syst. Evol.
232:213–236.
- Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
2010. Ecocrop (on-line resource).
- Govaerts, R. & D. G. Frodin.
1998. World checklist and bibliography of Fagales.
- International Seed Testing Association.
1971. A Multilingual Glossary of Common Plant-Names 2. Trees.
- Jalas, J. & J. Suominen.
1972–. Atlas florae europaeae.
- Kingsbury, J. M.
1964. Poisonous plants of the United States and Canada.
[poisonous].
- Krüssmann, G.
1984. Manual of cultivated broad-leaved trees and shrubs (English translation of Handbuch der Laubgehölze. 1976).
[= F. silvatica].
- Meyer, F. G. et al.
1994. A catalog of cultivated woody plants of the southeastern United States.
- Tutin, T. G. et al., eds.
1964. Flora europaea.
1:61.
- More:
Synonyms:
Check other web resources for Fagus sylvatica L.:
Images:
- More:
- Check PlantSystematics.org for additional images
-
Images Note: Be advised that their identity may be
inaccurate. Proper identification of a plant may require
specialized taxonomic knowledge or comparison with
properly documented herbarium material.
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| ARS
| GRIN
| NPGS
| New Search |
Cite as: USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program.
Germplasm Resources Information Network - (GRIN) [Online Database]. National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville,
Maryland.
URL: http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?16557 (22 May 2013)
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