3 hours of good picking. |
Abe’s Key to Mountain Vaccinium species
in the North Cascades.
1a. Berries purple to black, shiny, and lacking substantial bloom; leaves finely serrated along their entire margin; shrubs more than 50 cm tall:
– Vaccinium membranaceum, Black Huckleberry, Thinleaf H., Tall
H., Big H., Mt. H.
1b. Berries blue: – Go to 2
2a. Shrubs usually
more than 50 cm tall: – Go to 3
3a.
Berries covered with whitish bloom, on shorter curved stalks; flowers pinkish,
longer than broad, emerge before leaves; leaves lacking hairs on midrib,
margins often with fine teeth and/or stalked glands on the lower half; second
year twigs round:
– Vaccinium ovalifolium, Oval-leaf Blueberry
3b.
Berries lacking bloom (or with only faint bloom), on long straight stalks; flowers
bronze to pinkish-green, wider than long, pistils exerted; leaves with sparsely
hairy midrib on underside, margins usually smooth or with forward pointing
serration on the lower half; first and second year twigs angular:
– Vaccinium alaskaense, Alaska Blueberry (lumped by some
taxonomists with V. ovalifolium)
2b. Shrubs usually
less than 50 cm tall: – Go to 4
4a.
Plants green/pale green; leaves obovate; flowers small, longer than wide (4-7mm x 2-3); twigs puberulent:
– Vaccinium caespitosum, Dwarf
Bilberry, Dwarf Blueberry
4b.
Plants glaucous; flowers wider than long (5-7mm x 4-6mm); twigs usually glabrous:
– Vaccinium deliciosum, Cascade
Bilberry, Cascade Blueberry
Black Huckleberry (Vaccinium
membranaceum)
Black Huckleberry flower variations (above and below) |
From large to small, this is a delicious lineup of Black Huckleberries |
Black Huckleberries ripen to a shiny black |
Oval-leaf Blueberry (Vaccinium
ovalifolium)
Precocious Oval-leaf Blueberry flowers |
Oval-leaf Blueberry with ripe fruit |
Oval-leaf Blueberry |
Margin with stalked glands |
Alaska Blueberry (Vaccinium
alaskaense)
Alaska Blueberry flower variations (above and below) |
Note the exerted pistil and wide corolla |
The midvein of Alaska Blueberry is sparsely haired |
Long straight pedicel of Alaska Blueberry |
A red twigged Alaska Blueberry |
Dwarf Bilberry (Vaccinium
caespitosum)
Small hairy rhizomatous shrubs 3-60 cm tall capable of forming dense colonies. First year twigs are green and puberulent (finely hairy), round or weekly angled. Older twigs are yellowish green, reddish green, or reddish brown and eventually turn gray with peeling bark in old age. The stems will root if prostrate. Leaves are deciduous, usually oblanceolate but sometimes obovate or elliptic, 1-3 (5) cm long by 0.3-1.2 cm wide with gradually tapering bases and rounded to broadly acute (rarely acuminate) tips. Upper leaf surfaces are bright green and glabrous, lower leaf surfaces paler but not glaucous, glandular, and strongly reticulate (net veined), margins usually covered with cilia tipped serrations, especially near the tip. Petiole are less than 3 mm long. Flowers are white to pink, cylindric to urn shaped, 4-7 mm long and usually only half as wide with 5 small lighter colored lobes, arising from the lowest leaves of the first year shoots. Blooming from May to July. Flowers often have a slightly deflated appearance, which is accentuated in varieties with vertically striped flowers. Berries are 5-9 mm wide, often flattened, purple to black and usually covered with bluish bloom. Seeds are roughly 1 mm wide and too small to notice when eating the fine flavored fruit.
Dwarf Bilberry flower, Twin Sister's Range |
The specific epithet caespitosum and the botanical term cespitose,
both mean “clump or mat forming” and are derived from the Latin word caespes, which means “turf”.
Cascade Bilberry (Vaccinium
deliciosum)
This spring Cascade Bilberry flowered abundantly |
Found in subalpine
forest openings and alpine meadows mostly in the Cascades and Olympics but
sporadically in British Columbia, northern California and Idaho.
Although Cascade
Bilberry looks very similar to Dwarf Bilberry, it hybridizes more readily with
Oval-leaf Blueberry (Vander Kloet and Dickinson 1999) and/or probably Alaska
Blueberry. In my experience, the hybrid has the appearance of a robust Cascade Bilberry, but
produces berries that taste more like Oval-leaf Blueberry.
Monster Cascade Bilberries, the largest is 17 mm long |
This year while harvesting I noticed that many of the berries were getting mushed in my fingers. Still early in the season, I inspected closer to figure out why the fruit was so soft and discovered that many of the berries had been perforated. Some sort of insect is the likely culprit. According to Laurence Hope (in Lepofsky et al. 2005), "pest" infestation was a common reason among the Sto:lo to burn alpine meadows.
An insect damaged Cascade Bilberry |
Many people have trouble with the common names in the Vaccinium genus. Since dichotomous keys often help distinguish seemingly minute plant features, I thought I would develop a key for discerning confusing linguistic features.
Abe’s Key to the English Folk Taxonomy of the Vaccinium genus:
1a. Berries blue
2a. Shrubs usually
less than 50 cm (20 inches) tall; berries always single in leaf axils:
–
bilberries
2b. Shrubs usually more
than 50 cm (20 inches) tall; berries variously in clusters or single*:
–
blueberries
1b. Berries not blue
3a. Berries red,
acidic; stems prostrate; growing only in bogs and muskegs:
–
cranberries
3b. Berries red or
black; stems upright to spreading; habitat various:
–
huckleberries and whortleberries
* In some usage, the term "blueberries" must meet the criteria of having fruit borne in clusters (like the highbush blueberries of eastern North America) instead of on individual stalks (like all of our native species).
* In some usage, the term "blueberries" must meet the criteria of having fruit borne in clusters (like the highbush blueberries of eastern North America) instead of on individual stalks (like all of our native species).
References
George W. Dougals and
T. M. Ballard 1971. Effects of Fire on Alpine Plant Communities in the North
Cascades, Washington. Ecology, 52:6.
Gilkey, Helen M. and La
Rea J. Dennis 1980. Handbook of Northwestern Plants. Oregon State University Press, Corvalis OR
Fisher, Andrew H. 1997.
The 1932 Handshake Agreement: Yakama Indian Treaty Rights and Forest Service
Policy in the Pacific Northwest. Western Historical Quarterly, 28:2.
Hitchcock, Leo C. and
Arthur Cronquist 1973. Flora of the Pacific Northwest, and Illustrated Manual. University
of Washington Press, Seattle WA.
Lepofsky, Dana, Douglas
Hallett, Ken Lertzman, Rolf Mathewes, Alberty (Sonny) McHalsie, and Keven
Washbrook 2005. Documenting Precontact Plant Management on the Northwest Coast,
an Example of Prescribed Burning in the Central and Upper Fraser Valley,
British Columbia. In Keeping it Living,
eds. Douglas Deur and Nancy J. Turner. University of Washington Press, Seattle
WA.
Minore, Don, Alan W. Smart, and Michael E. Dubrasich 1979. Huckleberry ecology and management research in
the Pacific Northwest. Gen. Tech. Rep.
PNW-93. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,
Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station. 51 p.
Pojar, Jim and Andy
MacKinnon eds 1994. Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast. Lone Pine, Vancouver
BC
Truster, Scott and
Leslie Main Johnson 2008. “Berry Patch” as a Kind of Place- The Ethnoecology of
Black Huckleberry in Northwestern Canada. Human Ecology 36:553-568.
Turner, Nancy J. and
Sandra Peacock 2005. Solving the Perennial Paradox, Ethnobotanical Evidence for
Plant Resource Management on the Northwest Coast. In Keeping it Living, eds. Douglas Deur and Nancy J. Turner.
University of Washington Press, Seattle WA.
Vander Kloet, S. P. and T.
A. Dickinson 1999. The Taxonomy of Vaccinium Section Myrtillus (Ericaceae).
Brittonia, 51:2.