Ostrya
{{Short description|Genus of trees}}
{{for|the herbaceous plant known as hophornbeam copperleaf|Acalypha ostryifolia}}
{{automatic taxobox
|name = Hophornbeam
|image = Ostrya virginiana.jpg
|image_caption = Ostrya virginiana
|taxon = Ostrya
|authority = Scop.
|synonyms = Zugilus Raf.
}}
Ostrya is a genus of eight to 10 small deciduous trees belonging to the birch family Betulaceae. Common names include hop-hornbeam and hophornbeam. It may also be called ironwood, a name shared with a number of other plants.
The genus is native in southern Europe, southwest and eastern Asia, and North and Central America.[http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/namedetail.do?name_id=144612 Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families] They have a conical or irregular crown and a scaly, rough bark. They have alternate and double-toothed birch-like leaves 3–10 cm long. The flowers are produced in spring, with male catkins 5–10 cm long and female aments 2–5 cm long. The fruit form in pendulous clusters 3–8 cm long with 6–20 seeds; each seed is a small nut 2–4 mm long, fully enclosed in a bladder-like involucre.[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=123370 Flora of North America, vol 3, hop-hornbeam, Ostrya Scopoli, Fl. Carniol. 414. 1760. ]
The wood is very hard and heavy. The genus name Ostrya is derived from the Greek word {{lang|grc|ὀστρύα}} ({{grc-tr|ὀστρύα}}), which may be related to {{lang|grc|ὄστρακον}} ({{grc-tr|ὄστρακον}}) "shell (of an animal)".{{cite Merriam-Webster|Ostrya|access-date=2019-03-03}} Regarded as a weed tree by some foresters{{who?|date=January 2021}}{{fact|date=January 2021}}, this hard and stable wood was historically used to fashion plane soles.
Ostrya species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including winter moth, walnut sphinx, and Coleophora ostryae.
Species
Ostrya has the following species:[http://bonap.net/NAPA/TaxonMaps/Genus/County/Ostrya Biota of North America Program, 2013 county distribution maps]
- Ostrya carpinifolia Scop. – European hop-hornbeam - Mediterranean region of southern Europe, Middle-east, Turkey, Lebanon, Caucasus
- Ostrya chisosensis Correll – Chisos hophornbeam, Big Bend hophornbeam - endemic to Big Bend National Park in Texas
- Ostrya japonica Sarg. – Japanese hophornbeam - Japan, Korea, northern China
- Ostrya knowltonii Coville – Knowlton hophornbeam, western hophornbeam, wolf hophornbeam - Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas
- Ostrya multinervis Rehd. – Central Chinese hop-hornbeam - central China
- Ostrya rehderiana Chun – Zhejiang hop-hornbeam - Zhejiang Province in China
- Ostrya trichocarpa D.Fang & Y.S.Wang – Guangxi Province in China
- Ostrya virginiana (Mill.) K. Koch – eastern hophornbeam, American hophornbeam, ironwood - eastern US, eastern Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras
- Ostrya yunnanensis W.K.Hu – Yunnan hop-hornbeam - Yunnan Province in China
- †Ostrya oregoniana (fossil)
- †Ostrya scholzii (fossil)
=Fossil record=
†Ostrya scholzii fossil seeds of the Chattian stage, Oligocene, are known from the Oberleichtersbach Formation in the Rhön Mountains, central Germany.The floral change in the tertiary of the Rhön mountains (Germany) by Dieter Hans Mai - Acta Paleobotanica 47(1): 135-143, 2007.
References
{{Reflist}}
- Rushforth, K. (1985). "Ostrya". The Plantsman 7: 208-212.
- [http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=123370 Flora of China: Ostrya]
- [http://rbg-web2.rbge.org.uk/cgi-bin/nph-readbtree.pl/feout?FAMILY_XREF=&GENUS_XREF=Ostrya+&SPECIES_XREF=&TAXON_NAME_XREF=&RANK= Flora Europaea: Ostrya]