Id%Version%Family%Infra family%Hybrid genus%Genus%Infra genus%Rank%Authors%Basionym author%Publishing author%Full name without family and authors%Publication%Collation%Publication year full%Name status%Remarks%Basionym%Replaced synonym%Nomenclatural synonym%Distribution%Citation type 1137766-2%1.7%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%subsp.%Engelm.%%Engelm.%Quercus chrysolepis subsp. vacciniifolia%Trans. Acad. Sci. St. Louis%3: 393%1877%%%%%%%nom. et stat. nov. 215684-2%1.8%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%subsp.%A.E.Murray%%A.E.Murray%Quercus chrysolepis subsp. vacciniifolia%Kalmia%13: 25%1983%isonym%%%%%%comb. et stat. nov. 77233741-1%1.1%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%var.%(Engelm.) Engelm.%(Engelm.)%Engelm.%Quercus palmeri var. vacciniifolia%Bot. California [W.H.Brewer]%2: 97%1880%%%Fagaceae Quercus chrysolepis Liebm. subsp. palmeri Engelm.%%%%comb. et stat. nov. 216543-2%1.3.2.1.1.1%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%spec.%Kellogg%%Kellogg%Quercus vacciniifolia%Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci.%1: 96%1857%nom. inval. Published as a provisional name (protologue: Dr. Kellogg exhibited a drawing of a new species of Oak, to which was given the provisional name of Quercus vaccinifolia — Kellogg — or Huckleberry-leaf Oak. Leaves annual ...)%%%%%California (Southwestern U.S.A., Northern America)%tax. nov. 60455241-2%1.1.2.1.1.1%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%spec.%Kellogg%%Kellogg%Quercus vacciniifolia%Sci. Opin.%3[63]: 52%1870%nom. illeg. later homonym non Hittell (1863)%Protologue: Dr. Kellogg ... presented specimens of his huckleberry-leaf oak—(Quercus vaccinifolia, Kellogg), described many years since. The drawing of it, made at the time, was brought before the society again to verify its truthfulness to nature by comparison with specimen, and to correct an error, which by some mistake ascribes the name and description to Sir William Hooker. This had been considered by some as only a dwarfed form (Q. Chrysolepis), a tree often from 40 to 50 ft. high, and from 2 to 4 ft. in diameter, with very wide-spreading top, an evergreen, and very valuable tough timber-tree, quite equal to the live-oak of the Atlantic States for ship-building, whereas this is never more than from 2 to 4 ft. high. If the intermediate forms ever run into this, he claimed that they should also have fruit on them, which was never the case. If this is to be considered a mere variety, only dwarfed by locality, soil, or altitude, then by a parity of. reasoning the Garrya Buxifolia (Gray), which grows with it, should be considered only a dwarfed form of G. elliptica. Yet there is no one that would contend for this.%%%%California (Southwestern U.S.A., Northern America)%tax. nov. 77211606-1%1.1%Fagaceae%%N%Quercus%%spec.%Hittell%%Hittell%Quercus vacciniifolia%Resources Calif.%101%1863%%%%%%California (Southwestern U.S.A., Northern America)%tax. nov.