Prunus virginiana explained

Prunus virginiana, commonly called bitter-berry, chokecherry, Virginia bird cherry, and western chokecherry (also black chokecherry for P. virginiana var. demissa), is a species of bird cherry (Prunus subgenus Padus) native to North America.

Description

Chokecherry is a suckering shrub or small tree growing to NaNabbr=offNaNabbr=off tall, rarely to and exceptionally wide, 60feet with a trunk as thick as .[1] The leaves are oval, 2.5- long and wide, with a serrated margin. The stems rarely exceed in length.[2]

The flowers are produced in racemes long in late spring (well after leaf emergence), eventually growing up to 15 cm. They are NaNmm across.

The fruits (drupes) are about in diameter, range in color from bright red to black, and possess a very astringent taste, being both somewhat sour and somewhat bitter. They get darker and marginally sweeter as they ripen. They each contain a large stone.

Chemistry

Chokecherries are very high in antioxidant pigment compounds, such as anthocyanins. They share this property with chokeberries, further contributing to confusion.

Similar species

The chokecherry is closely related to the black cherry (Prunus serotina) of eastern North America, which can reach 100feet tall and has larger leaves and darker fruit. The chokecherry leaf has a finely serrated margin and is dark green above with a paler underside, while the black cherry leaf has numerous blunt edges along its margin and is dark green and smooth.[3]

Taxonomy

The name chokecherry is also used for the related Manchurian cherry or Amur chokecherry (Prunus maackii).

Varieties

Distribution

The natural historic range of P. virginiana includes most of Canada (including Northwest Territories, but excluding Yukon, Nunavut, and Labrador), most of the United States (including Alaska, but excluding some states in the Southeast), and northern Mexico (Sonora, Chihuahua, Baja California, Durango, Zacatecas, Coahuila, and Nuevo León).[5]

Ecology

The wild chokecherry is often considered a pest, as it is a host for the tent caterpillar, a threat to other fruit plants. It is also a larval host to the black-waved flannel moth, the blinded sphinx, the cecropia moth, the coral hairstreak, the cynthia moth, the elm sphinx, Glover's silkmoth, the hummingbird clearwing moth, the imperial moth, the Io moth, the polyphemus moth, the promethea moth, the red-spotted purple, the small-eyed sphinx, the spring azure, the striped hairstreak, the tiger swallowtail, the twin-spotted sphinx, and Weidemeyer's admiral.[6]

Many wildlife, including birds and game animals, eat the berries. Moose, elk, mountain sheep, deer and rabbits eat the foliage, twigs, leaves, and buds. Deer and elk sometimes browse the twigs profusely, not letting the plant grow above knee height. The leaves serve as food for caterpillars of various Lepidoptera.

Cultivation

The chokecherry has a number of cultivars. 'Canada Red' and 'Schubert' have leaves that mature to purple and turn orange and red in the autumn.[7] 'Goertz' has a nonastringent, so palatable, fruit. Research at the University of Saskatchewan seeks to find or create new cultivars to increase production and processing.

Toxicity

The stone of the fruit is poisonous.[8] Chokecherry, including the foliage, is toxic to horses, moose, cattle, goats, deer, and other animals with segmented stomachs (rumens), especially after the leaves have wilted (such as after a frost or after branches have been broken); wilting releases cyanide and makes the plant sweet. About NaNkg (-2,147,483,648lb) of foliage can be fatal. In horses, symptoms include heavy breathing, agitation, and weakness.

Uses

For many Native American tribes of the Northern Rockies, Northern Plains, and boreal forest region of Canada and the United States, chokecherries are the most important fruit in their traditional diets and are part of pemmican, a staple traditional food. The bark of chokecherry root is made into an asperous-textured concoction used to ward off or treat colds, fever and stomach maladies by Native Americans.[9] The inner bark of the chokecherry, as well as red osier dogwood, or alder, is also used by some tribes in ceremonial smoking mixtures, known as kinnikinnick.[10] The chokecherry fruit can be eaten when fully ripe, but otherwise contains a toxin.[11] The fruit can be used to make jam or syrup, but the bitter nature of the fruit requires sugar to sweeten the preserves.[12] The Plains Indians pound up the whole fruits—including the toxic pits—in a mortar, from which they made sun-baked cakes.[13]

Chokecherry is also used to craft wine in the Western United States, mainly in the Dakotas and Utah, as well as in Manitoba, Canada.

In culture

In 2007, North Dakota governor John Hoeven signed a bill naming the chokecherry the state's official fruit, in part because its remains have been found at more archeological sites in the Dakotas than anywhere else.[14]

In Norman Maclean's novella A River Runs Through It, the narrator's mother makes chokecherry jelly for her son but she forgets which son likes it.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Arno . Stephen F. . Northwest Trees: Identifying & Understanding the Region's Native Trees . Hammerly . Ramona P. . . 2020 . 978-1-68051-329-5 . field guide . Seattle . 242–245 . en . 1141235469 . 1977.
  2. Book: Angier, Bradford. Field Guide to Edible Wild Plants. Stackpole Books. 1974. 0-8117-0616-8. Harrisburg, PA. 52. 799792. Bradford Angier.
  3. Book: Elias . Thomas S. . Edible Wild Plants A North American Field Guide . Dykeman . Peter A. . 1990 . . 0-8069-7488-5 . New York.
  4. Book: Farrar, J.L. . Trees in Canada . 1995 . . 9781550411997 . Markham, Ontario . registration.
  5. Web site: Prunus virginiana: photos, partial distribution map . SEINet, Arizona - New Mexico chapter.
  6. The Xerces Society (2016), Gardening for Butterflies: How You Can Attract and Protect Beautiful, Beneficial Insects, Timber Press.
  7. Web site: Prunus virginiana--Chokecherry . https://web.archive.org/web/20011126083620/http://www.msue.msu.edu/msue/imp/modzz/00001191.html . 2001-11-26 . Michigan State University Extension . Michigan State University . Ornamental Plants plus Version 3.0.
  8. Book: Whitney, Stephen . Western Forests (The Audubon Society Nature Guides) . 1985 . Knopf . 0-394-73127-1 . New York . 423.
  9. Book: Smith, Norman F. . 81 . Trees of Michigan and the Upper Great Lakes . 6th . Thunder Bay Press . 2002.
  10. Web site: 2009 . Bearberry . Discovering Lewis and Clark . The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation . 2011-04-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101218093355/http://lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=1355 . 2010-12-18 . dead .
  11. Book: Benoliel, Doug. Northwest Foraging: The Classic Guide to Edible Plants of the Pacific Northwest. Skipstone. 2011. 978-1-59485-366-1. Rev. and updated. Seattle, WA. 69. 668195076.
  12. Book: Gibbons, Euell . 1962 . Stalking the Wild Asparagus . David McKay . New York.
  13. Book: Peattie, Donald Culross . Donald C. Peattie . A Natural History of Western Trees . 1953 . . New York . 540–41.
  14. Book: Kindscher, K. . Edible Wild Plants of the Prairie: An Ethnobotanical Guide . 1987.