bilberry, blueberry, cranberry, huckleberry
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small black blueberry, southern blueberry
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Subshrubs, shrubs, vines, or trees. |
Plants forming extensive, open colonies, 1–7.5 dm; twigs yellowish green, ± terete, hairy. |
erect, spreading, or creeping, glabrous or hairy. |
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persistent or deciduous; petiole absent or present; blade elliptic or ovate to oblong-lanceolate or spatulate, membranous to coriaceous, margins entire or serrate, plane or, sometimes, revolute, surfaces glabrous or hairy; venation brochidodromous. |
deciduous, rarely persistent; blade green, spatulate to elliptic, 13–40 × 3–17 mm, subcoriaceous, margins sharply to obscurely serrate, surfaces glandular abaxially, hairy especially when young, rarely glabrous. |
axillary or terminal, racemes, usually 2–10-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary, (leafy); (bracteoles absent, present in sect. Oxycoccos). |
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sepals 4–5, connate basally; petals 4–5(–6), connate nearly their entire lengths, sometimes distinct or nearly so, white or cream to pink, bronze, or green, rarely red, corolla globose, cylindric, urceolate, or campanulate, lobes shorter to longer than tube; filaments straight, flat, glabrous or hairy, without spurs; stamens 8–10, included (sometimes exserted); anthers with or without awns, dehiscent by pores (pores laciniate in sect. Polycodium); pistil 4–5-carpellate; ovary inferior, 4–5-locular or pseudo 10-locular; stigma capitate. |
calyx pale green, sometimes hairy; corolla usually white tinged with pink, cylindric, 5–9 mm; filaments ± hairy. |
baccate, ovoid to globose, fleshy. |
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black, 6–8 mm diam., sometimes puberulent. |
2–40, ellipsoid; testa reticulate. |
5–25, ca. 1 mm. |
= 12. |
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= 24. |
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Flowering winter–spring. |
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Dry sand hills, pine barrens, scrubby oak woods, open pine parkland, and flatwoods subject to burning |
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0-200 m (0-700 ft) |
North America; Mexico; Central America; West Indies; n South America; Europe; Asia (including Malesia) |
AL; FL; GA; MS; NC; SC; VA
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Species ca. 500 (25 in the flora). The North American species of Vaccinium are distributed among ten sections. Some of these (e.g., Oxycoccus, Polycodium) have been treated as genera by recent authors, although only Oxycoccus has been recognized at genus rank widely among North American authors. Molecular data support the idea that Vaccinium is a natural genus, albeit large and diverse, provided that Oxycoccus is included. In eastern North America, the name huckleberry is applied to species of Gaylussacia, while in western North America some species of Vaccinium are called huckleberries. Most, if not all, species of Vaccinium are edible, finding wide acceptance as fresh fruits, and for pies, preserves, etc. Some have medicinal value, especially V. macrocarpon for urinary problems. Further uses and references are noted with the individual species. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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1. Inflorescences in axils of leaves or bracts of shoots of current season (or older shoots) | → 2 |
1. Inflorescences on previous year’s shoots or on older woody stems (sometimes on new growth as well) | → 10 |
2. Berries 4-locular; corollas deeply 4-lobed | → 3 |
2. Berries 5-locular; corollas globose to urceolate, shallowly or scarcely lobed [45c. sect. Myrtillus] | → 4 |
3. Plants erect shrubs [45a. sect. Oxycoccoides]. | V. erythrocarpum |
3. Plants usually trailing vines, ascending [45c. sect. Oxycoccus (in part)]. | V. macrocarpon |
4. Berries red or bluish purple and translucent; twigs angled, green | → 5 |
4. Berries deep purple, purplish black, black, or blue (rarely bluish black, maroon, reddish, or red); twigs usually ± terete, sometimes angled, yellow-green, green, reddish green, reddish brown, or golden brown | → 6 |
5. Shrubs colonial, 0.7-2 dm; berries 4-6 mm diam. | V. scoparium |
5. Shrubs crown-forming, 10-70 dm; berries 7-10 mm diam. | V. parvifolium |
6. Leaf blades with margins sharply serrate, surfaces glandular abaxially | → 7 |
6. Leaf blades with portions of margins ± entire, surfaces sometimes eglandular abaxially or, rarely, glandular throughout | → 8 |
| V. myrtillus |
7. Twigs yellow-green or reddish green, terete to slightly angled. | V. membranaceum |
8. Shrubs 3-40 dm, clumped. | V. ovalifolium |
8. Shrubs 0.3-15 dm, forming small clumps to extensive colonies | → 9 |
9. Twigs green (sometimes glaucous), usually glabrous, rarely hairy. | V. deliciosum |
9. Twigs yellow-green, reddish green, or reddish brown, finely puberulent or, rarely, glabrous. | V. cespitosum |
| → 11 |
10. Twigs verrucose [45i. sect. Cyanococcus] | → 17 |
11. Leaves usually deciduous | → 12 |
| → 14 |
12. Racemes 2-4-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary, ebracteate; corollas urceolate; berries blue [45b. sect. Vaccinium]. | V. uliginosum |
12. Racemes 5-17-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary, bracteate; corollas campanulate to urceolate; berries green, yellow-green, yellow, purple, or black | → 13 |
13. Corollas campanulate; pedicels continuous with calyx tubes [45e. sect. Polycodium]. | V. stamineum |
13. Corollas campanulate to urceolate; pedicels articulated with calyx tubes [45g. sect. Batodendron]. | V. arboreum |
14. Plants usually trailing, sometimes ascending vines | → 15 |
14. Plants subshrubs or shrubs | → 16 |
15. Berries deep red, 4-locular; pedicels 2-3 cm [45c. sect. Oxycoccus (in part)]. | V. oxycoccos |
15. Berries black, 5-locular; pedicels 0.1-0.3 cm [45h. sect. Herpothamnus]. | V. crassifolium |
16. Plants rhizomatous, 0.1-3.5 dm; berries red, 4-locular [45d. sect. Vitis-idaea]. | V. vitis-idaea |
16. Plants clump- or crown-forming, (3-)4-12(-40) dm; berries black or blue, 5-locular [45j. sect. Pyxothamnus]. | V. ovatum |
17. Shrubs 10-50 dm; leaf blades 15-70 mm. | V. corymbosum |
17. Shrubs 0.1-15 dm; leaf blades 5-62 mm | → 18 |
18. Leaves persistent for 1+ years | → 19 |
18. Leaves usually deciduous, rarely persistent | → 20 |
19. Leaf blades glandular abaxially; twigs bright green; berries black. | V. myrsinites |
19. Leaf blades glabrous abaxially; twigs pale green (glaucous); berries blue. | V. darrowii |
20. Leaf blades glandular abaxially. | V. tenellum |
20. Leaf blades eglandular abaxially | → 21 |
21. Leaf blade margins sharply and uniformly serrate | → 22 |
21. Leaf blade margins entire | → 23 |
22. Shrubs 0.1-0.9 dm; leaf blades 2-6 mm wide. | V. boreale |
22. Shrubs 1-3 dm; leaf blades (5-)6-16(-20) mm wide. | V. angustifolium |
23. Leaf blades pale green or glaucous abaxially, surfaces usually glabrous; twigs hairy in lines or glabrous. | V. pallidum |
23. Leaf blades green abaxially, surfaces densely hairy; twigs pilose or hairy | → 24 |
24. Corollas and calyces glandular. | V. hirsutum |
24. Corollas and calyces eglandular. | V. myrtilloides |
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FNA vol. 8, p. 515. Author: Sam P. Vander Kloet. |
FNA vol. 8, p. 528. |
Ericaceae > subfam. Vaccinioideae |
Ericaceae > subfam. Vaccinioideae > Vaccinium > sect. Cyanococcus |
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V. angustifolium, V. arboreum, V. boreale, V. cespitosum, V. corymbosum, V. crassifolium, V. darrowii, V. deliciosum, V. erythrocarpum, V. hirsutum, V. macrocarpon, V. membranaceum, V. myrsinites, V. myrtilloides, V. myrtillus, V. ovalifolium, V. ovatum, V. oxycoccos, V. pallidum, V. parvifolium, V. scoparium, V. stamineum, V. uliginosum, V. vitis-idaea |
V. angustifolium, V. arboreum, V. boreale, V. cespitosum, V. corymbosum, V. crassifolium, V. darrowii, V. deliciosum, V. erythrocarpum, V. hirsutum, V. macrocarpon, V. membranaceum, V. myrsinites, V. myrtilloides, V. myrtillus, V. ovalifolium, V. ovatum, V. oxycoccos, V. pallidum, V. parvifolium, V. scoparium, V. stamineum, V. tenellum, V. uliginosum, V. vitis-idaea |
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Cyanococcus tenellus |
Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 349. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 166. 1754 , |
Aiton: Hort. Kew. 2: 12. 1789 , |
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