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Scrub oak

Quercus berberidifolia

Care

Sun

full sun, part shade

Water

very low

Soil

Fast, Medium; Most often found on eroded granite or sandstone soils.

Size

15–20ft tall , 15–15ft wide

Bloom

Jan-Dec

Foliage

Evergreen

Deer

Resistant

Edible

Acorns leached and ground into flour for traditional Indigenous food

Keystone Plant

Supports up to 275 butterfly and moth species in Mediterranean California

Native Range

Chaparral and oak woodland foothills from the Sierra Nevada to the Tehachapi Mountains, and scattered in the Coast Ranges, below 4000 ft elevation.

Care Guide

Planting

Plant your Scrub Oak in full sun to part shade in fall or winter for best establishment. It thrives in fast to medium-draining soil like you'd find on eroded granite or sandstone - if your soil drains slowly, amend heavily or choose a hillside spot. Space it with room to spread, especially if you're in a warmer Bay Area microclimate where it can reach several meters tall; in cooler areas it stays more compact. Mulch with a thick layer of oak leaves and add a few large rocks around the base.

After Planting

Water regularly through your first summer and into fall to establish deep roots, then cut back to once a month or less once established - the goal is to eventually refrain from summer watering altogether to honor its natural drought tolerance. In year one, resist the urge to water during dry summers; this is the #1 mistake people make with Scrub Oak. Minimal pruning is needed since this is an easy-care plant; let it grow naturally. It's evergreen and cold-hardy to 20°F, so it requires no special winter prep for the Bay Area.

Visit Calscape for more information about Scrub oak

Endangered & Threatened Species Supported

California scrub-jay Aphelocoma californica
CA Special Concern

California Species of Special Concern

Wildlife Supported

Birds

Seeds · Fall

Acorn caching and consumption September-December, major seed disperser and predator

Mammals

Foliage · Year-Round

Year-round browse in coastal ranges and northern California

Foliage · Year-Round

Primary browse species, especially critical in winter months when other forage limited

Seeds · Fall

Acorn caching and consumption, September through winter

Seeds · Fall

Acorn production and dispersal by jays and squirrels September-November, critical caching resource

Arachnids

Shelter · Year-Round

Web construction among branches and foliage for prey interception

Insects

Wood-decomposer fungus on dead wood, creates habitat microstructure

mod Moki ant
Foliage · Year-Round

Foraging on foliage and tending hemipteran colonies on branches

Foliage · Spring

Spring through early summer feeding on leaves and stems

Larval Host · Year-Round

Parasitic plant hosted on branches year-round, provides mistletoe berries for winter bird forage

Where to Buy

East Bay Wilds

2110 Eighth St, Suite 202, Berkeley

Fri 9:30am-4pm (occasional Sat, call ahead)

1.5 mi (510) 409-5858 Website
Native Here Nursery

101 Golf Course Dr, Tilden Regional Park, Berkeley

Sat 10am-2pm

3.0 mi (510) 549-0211 Website
Watershed Nursery

601A Canal Blvd, Richmond

Tue-Sun 10am-4pm

5.0 mi (510) 234-2222 Website
Yerba Buena Nursery

12511 San Mateo Rd, Half Moon Bay

Tue-Sat 9am-4pm

12.0 mi (650) 851-1668 Website