Heteromeles Explained

Heteromeles arbutifolia (;[1] more commonly by Californian botanists), commonly known as toyon, is a common perennial shrub native to extreme southwest Oregon,[2] [3] California, and the Baja California Peninsula. It is the sole species in the genus Heteromeles.

Toyon is a prominent component of the coastal sage scrub plant community, and is a part of drought-adapted chaparral and mixed oak woodland habitats.[4] It is also known by the common names Christmas berry and California holly.

Description

Toyon typically grows from 2–5 m (rarely up to 10 m in shaded conditions) and has a rounded to irregular top. Its leaves are evergreen, alternate, sharply toothed, have short petioles, and are 5–10 cm in length and 2–4 cm wide. In the early summer it produces small white flowers 6–10 mm diameter in dense terminal corymbs. Flowering peaks in June.[5]

The five petals are rounded. The fruit is a small pome,[6] 5–10 mm across, bright red and berry-like, produced in large quantities, maturing in the fall and persisting well into the winter.

Phytochemistry

The plant has been used as a treatment for Alzheimer's by indigenous people of California and recent research has found a number of active compounds that are potentially beneficial to Alzheimer's treatment. These include icariside compounds, which protect the blood-brain barrier and prevent infiltration of inflammatory cells into the brain.

Taxonomy

The genera Photinia, Aronia, Pourthiaea, and Stranvaesia have historically been variously combined by different taxonomists. The genus Heteromeles as originally published by Max Joseph Roemer was monospecific, including Photinia arbutifolia Lindl. (1820), as H. arbutifolia (Lindl.) M. Roem, but the name was illegitimate (superfluous) because it included the type of the genus Photinia. This has since been corrected by conservation, and the name is therefore often written as Heteromeles M. Roem. nom. cons. (1847).

Varieties

Toxicity

Toyon pomes are acidic and astringent, and contain a small amount of cyanogenic glycosides, which break down into hydrocyanic acid on digestion. This is removed by mild cooking.[10] Most fruits from plants in the family Rosaceae, including apples, apricots, peaches, cherries, and plums, contain cyanide.

Some pomes, though mealy, astringent and acidic when raw, were eaten fresh, or mashed into water to make a beverage.

A 2016 study found 5g of the dried berries (used as a treatment for Alzheimer's) to be safe. The study also found no cyanogenic compounds in the plant.

Uses

The pomes provided food for local Native American tribes, such as the Chumash, Tongva, and Tataviam. The pomes also can be made into a jelly. Native Americans also made a tea from the leaves as a stomach remedy. Most were dried and stored, then later cooked into porridge or pancakes. Later settlers added sugar to make custard and wine.[11] The plants were also often cooked over a fire to remove the slightly bitter taste by Californian tribes.

The Tongva (who called the plant ashuwet) ate the berries fresh, boiled and left them in an earthen oven for 2 to 3 days, roasted them, or made them into a cider. Pulverized flowers were steeped into hot water to make tea which could be used to ease gynecological ailments. For stomach pains, bark and leaves are steeped in hot water to make tea. The same tea can serve as a seasonal tonic and ease other body pains. Also, applying mashed ashuwet to sores eases pain. Infected wounds are washed using an infusion of bark and leaves. The ʔívil̃uqaletem also called the plant ashwet. They often consumed the fruit both raw and cooked.

Cultivation

Toyon can be grown in domestic gardens in well-drained soil, and is cultivated as an ornamental plant as far north as Southern England. It can survive temperatures as low as -12 °C. In winter, the bright red pomes (which birds often eat voraciously) are showy.

Like many other genera in the Rosaceae tribe Maleae, toyon includes some cultivars that are susceptible to fireblight.[12] It survives on little water, making it suitable for xeriscape gardening, and is less of a fire hazard than some chaparral plants.[13]

They are visited by butterflies, and have a mild, hawthorn-like scent. The fruit are consumed by birds, including mockingbirds, American robins, cedar waxwings and hermit thrushes. Mammals including coyotes and bears also eat and disperse the pomes.

Culture

In 1921,[14] collecting toyon branches for Christmas became so popular in Los Angeles that the State of California passed a law forbidding collecting on public land or on any land not owned by the person picking any plant without the landowner's written permission (CA Penal Code § 384a).[15] [16]

Toyon was adopted as the official native plant of the city of Los Angeles by the LA City Council on April 17, 2012.[17]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  2. December 2016. Final Environmental Impact Statement - Appendices. Smith River National Recreation Area Restoration and Motorize Travel Management. United States Department of Agriculture. 192. Heteromeles arbutifolia is found in Oregon and the location southwest of Pappas Flat is not the northernmost site in the Pacific Northwest. Additionally, this site is adjacent to Highway 199 and will not be affected by the proposed actions, and is outside the geographic scope of the project..
  3. Wood. Wendell. February 2008. Toyon Joins the List of Oregon's Native Shrubs. Bulletin of the Native Plant Society of Oregon. 41. 2. 11, 18.
  4. C.M. Hogan, 2008
  5. https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/53405-Heteromeles-arbutifolia Heteromeles arbutifolia
  6. Web site: Heteromeles arbutifolia, in Jepson Flora Project. Regents of the University of California. 14 November 2013.
  7. Rebman. J. P.. Gibson. J.. Rich. K.. 2016. Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Baja California, Mexico. Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History. 45. 245.
  8. de la Luz, J. L. L., Rebman, J. P., & Oberbauer, T. (2003). On the urgency of conservation on Guadalupe Island, Mexico: is it a lost paradise?. Biodiversity & Conservation, 12(5), 1073-1082.
  9. Raabe, R. D., & Gardner, M. W. (1972). Scab of Pyracantha, loquat, toyon, and kageneckia. Phytopathology, 62, 914-916.
  10. Web site: Jim Moore. Toyon – California's Own Christmas Berry Can Be Toxic |. mountainvalleyliving.com. 21 November 2017 . 2021-12-27.
  11. Web site: Ethnobotany of southern California native plants: Toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia). EthnoHerbalist.
  12. https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/2063/2016/07/Fireblight-Cherry.pdf Austin Hagan, Edward Sikora, William Gazaway, Nancy Kokalis- Burelle, 2004. Fire Blight on Fruit Trees and Woody Ornamentals, Alabama A&M and Auburn Universities
  13. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/58417/ Dave's Garden
  14. November 11, 1921 Santa Ana Register, "Holly Trees of County to be saved by Vandals" State Legislature enacts law prohibiting the mutilation or sale of California Holly taken from public lands.
  15. News: California Holly Adds Color to Trail Up Mt. Hollywood. JOHN . McKINNEY. Los Angeles Times . December 6, 1986. 12.
  16. http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=pen&group=00001-01000&file=369a-402c California Penal Code Section 384a
  17. Web site: Item No. (28). Journal/Council Proceedings. LA City Council. 23 November 2013.