Abstract

Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii Nutt.) is normally monoecious, flowering once a year in spring. In Utah, August 1978, several individuals were observed producing hermaphroditic flowers in riparian habitats. This unusual event was preceded by a general freeze of male catkins in May which resulted in low acorn production. In 1979 the same individuals flowered normally, with no evidence of freeze damage or hermaphroditic flowers being observed. Acorns were produced on these individuals in both years. It is suggested that hermaphroditic flowering in the Fagaceae is an ancestral condition, still present in the genome, but normally suppressed, which may be evoked by unusual environmental conditions.

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