Fagus orientalis, commonly known as the Oriental beech, is a deciduous tree in the beech family Fagaceae. It is native to Eurasia, in Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
Fagus orientalis is a large tree, capable of reaching heights of up to 45m (148feet) tall and 3m (10feet) trunk diameter, though more typically 25m-35mm (82feet-115feetm) tall and up to 1.5m (04.9feet) trunk diameter.
The leaves are alternate, simple, and entire or with a slightly crenate margin, 7cm-15cmcm (03inches-06inchescm) long and 5cm-9cmcm (02inches-04inchescm) broad, with 7–13 veins on each side of the leaf (6–7 veins in F. sylvatica). The buds are long and slender, 15- long and 2mm3mm thick, but thicker, till 4mm5mm, where the buds include flower buds.
The flowers are small catkins which appear shortly after the leaves in spring.
The seeds are small triangular nuts 15mm20mm long and 7mm10mm wide at the base; there are two nuts in each cupule, maturing in the autumn 5–6 months after pollination. The cupule differs from that of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) in having flattened, slightly leaf-like appendages at the base (which are slender, soft spines in European beech).
Fagus orientalis is closely related to Fagus sylvatica (the European beech), and hybridises with it in the Balkans and northwestern Turkey. These hybrids with European Beech are named Fagus × taurica.
The tree's natural range extends from southeastern Bulgaria's Strandja mountain range and Greece through northwest Turkey, and east to the Caucasus Mountains in Georgia and Russia, as well as the Alborz Mountains in Iran.
The wood of Fagus orientalis is heavy, hard, strong and highly resistant to shock. These features makes it suitable for steam bending. The wood is also a source to fuelwood and can be used for constructions particleboard, furniture, flooring veneer, mining poles, railway tiles and paper.[1]
European Forest Genetic Resources Programme
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