Rubus bartonianus |
Rubus ursinus |
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Pacific blackberry, trailing blackberry, dewberry, Douglasberry |
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Habit | Dioecious perennial with slender, trailing stems up to 6 m. long, abundantly armed with slender, hooked prickles. | |
Leaves | Leaves trifoliate, the lateral leaflets ovate-lanceolate, 3-7 cm. long, doubly serrate; terminal leaflet larger, deeply 3-lobed. |
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Flowers | Floral branches several, 1-3 dm. long, erect, bearing several leaves and 1-several flat-topped flower clusters, the inflorescence with stalked glands; calyx hairy and glandular, the 5 lobes lanceolate, 5-11 mm. long; staminate petals 5, white, elliptic-spatulate, 7-11 mm. long, with 75-100 stamens; pistillate petals broader and shorter, with numerous pistils. |
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Fruits | Drupelets purplish-black, coherent, attached to the elongate receptacle; fruit up to 2.5 cm. long. |
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Rubus bartonianus |
Rubus ursinus |
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Flowering time | April-August | |
Habitat | Open to fairly dense woodlands, thickets, and balds, sea level to middle elevations in the mountains; common in logged areas. | |
Distribution | Occurring chiefly west of the Cascades crest in Washington; British Columbia to California, east to Montana.
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Origin | Native | |
Conservation status | Not of concern | |
Sibling taxa | ||
Web links |
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