Engelmann Oak

Quercus engelmannii

Engelmann oak (Quercus engelmannii) is the rarest of all California mainland oak species. It grows from LA County in southern California, southward to Baja California. Engelmann Oak is a drought tolerant and widely adaptable California native tree featuring bluish foliage, a classic oak growth habit, a moderate foliage density, and proven urban tolerance.

With its evolutionary heritage in monsoonal northwestern Mexico, Engelmann oak is much more tolerant of summer irrigation (and summer precipitation if summer monsoons return to California) than most California native plants. Engelmann oak is found growing natively on the same kinds of deep soil and groundwater accessible locations that Valley oak (Quercus lobata) occupies farther north in California. And as with Valley oak (and most other trees), thin or compacted soils limit the use of Engelmann oak, as Engelmann oak trees rely on deep soils for drought tolerance, and for rooting volume to support tree growth and size.

Interestingly, there is a clear geographical gap of 30 to 50 miles between the ranges of Engelmann oak and California Valley oak, with no hybrids ever discovered in this zone. This gap is now mostly northern Los Angeles, leaving a thoughtful tree observer to wonder what might have caused this gap. (Hint: the answer almost certainly concerns low temperatures.) With the historically rapid shift to higher temperatures occurring worldwide, optimal Engelmann oak range (along with Engelmann oak-dependent biodiversity) is moving north along the West Coast, part of the poleward shift of the entire biosphere in response to anthropogenic climate change.

That Engelmann oak has a higher heat tolerance than Valley oak is shown not only in each plants geographical range, but also in the leaf color of the Engelmann oak, with blue foliage being a well-understood plant adaptation to drought and high temperatures. Blue foliage is also a prized aesthetic feature in plants, and the California Blue oak (Quercus douglasii) is currently specified around the Bay Area in part for this trait. But as the Blue oak struggles with Phytophthora, powdery mildew and chronically low survival and reproduction rates in the Bay Area and other parts of its historical range, Engelmann oaks can be found thriving in these same areas, adding a valuable and attractive tool to the urban native California planting palette.

Learn More:

  • SelecTree

    Engelmann Oak basics…

  • Oaks of the World

    A more scientific look into the Quercus engelmannii…

  • iNaturalist

    See and learn about the tree in the wild…

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Coast Live Oak (Quercus agrifolia and x ganderi)

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Island Oak Quercus tomentella