FAGACEAE - Beech Family
Deciduous or evergreen trees
or shrubs
Leaves alternate,
simple, often lobed, with stipules
Flowers inconspicuous, unisexual, reduced, staminate flowers
solitary, in catkins or heads,
pistillate flowers solitary or
few in clusters

Fruit a 1-seeded nut, seed
is solitary due to abortion of other embryos, see figure below.
8 genera, 900 species, divided into 3 subfamilies
1. Fagoideae - Fagus
(beech)
2. Castaneoideae - Castanea
(chestnuts)


3. Quercoideae - Quercus
(oaks)


Economic uses - food (chestnuts) lumber, cork, ornamental and
shade trees. The American Chestnut, Castanea dentata was a
major component of the forests of the eastern U.S. The nuts were an
important source of food for wildlife and humans and the lumber was
also highly prized. A blight destroyed nearly all the adult trees,
resulting in major changes to the forest. Attempts to develop
resistant strains continue and may result in the presence of these
magnificent plants in American forests again but it will take many
decades. For a more detailed history of the American Chestnut and
efforts to restore it, visit The
American Chestnut Foundation.
Medicinal uses - members of this family produce large amounts of
tannins, which have antiviral, antiseptic and antitumor properties
but they are also carcinogenic
Diagnostic characters - trees with simple, alternate leaves,
fruit a nut, partially covered with a cupule of hardened bracts
IMAGE GALLERY
FLOWERING
PLANT GATEWAY