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Encyclopedia > Blackberries
This article is about the fruit. For other uses see blackberry (disambiguation)


Blackberry

Blackberries on a bush
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae
Subfamily: Rosoideae
Genus: Rubus
Subgenus: Eubatus
'Species'

Rubus fruticosus - Common Blackberry
and hundreds more microspecies
(the subgenus also includes the dewberries)


The blackberry is a widespread and well known shrub; a bramble fruit (genus Rubus, family Rosaceae) growing to 3 m (10 ft) and producing a soft bodied fruit popular for making jams and sometimes wine. Several Rubus species are called blackberry and since the species easily hybridize, there are many cultivars with more than one species in their ancestry.


Marionberry is a cross between Chehalem and Olallieberry blackberries. It is said to "capture the best attributes of both berries and yields an aromatic bouquet and an intense blackberry flavor"[1] (http://www.oregon_berries.com/cx2/mk04f1a.htm). Olallieberry (sometimes spelled ollalieberry) in turn is a cross between loganberry and youngberry.


The blackberry has a scrambling habit of dense arching stems carrying short curved very sharp spines, the branches rooting from the node tip when they reach the ground. It is very pervasive, growing at fast daily rates in woods, scrub, hillsides and hedgerows, colonising large areas in a relatively short time. It will tolerate poor soil, and is an early coloniser of wasteland and building sites. It has palmate leaves of three to five leaflets with flowers of white or pink appearing from May to August, ripening to a black or dark purple fruit, the "blackberry".

Black Butte blackberry
Enlarge
Blackberry (inflorescence)

The blackberry is also the fruit of the blackberry plant. In proper botanical language, it is not a berry at all, but instead an aggregate fruit of numerous drupelets.


In the photo at the upper right, the early flowers have formed more drupelets than the later ones. This can be a symptom of exhausted reserves in the plant's roots, marginal pollinator populations, or where a small change in conditions, such as a rainy day, or a day too hot for bees to work after early morning, can reduce the number of bee visits/pollen grains delivered to the flower, thus reducing the quality of the fruit. The drupelets only develop around ovules which are fertilized by the male gamete from a pollen grain.

Enlarge
Blackberry flower

Blackberry blossoms are good nectar producers, and large acreages of wild blackberries will yield a medium to dark, fruity honey.

Enlarge
Blackberry (variety Americus) - from watercolor 1894

Superstition in the UK holds that blackberries should not be picked after 15th September as the devil has claimed them, having left a mark on the leaves. There is some value behind this legend, as after this date, wetter and cooler weather often allows the fruit to become infected by various moulds such as Botrytis, which give the fruit an unpleasant flavour and may be toxic. It is also not advisable to use or eat blackberries growing close to busy roads due to the accumulated toxins (e.g., lead) from the traffic.


The related but the smaller dewberry (R. caesius) can be distinguished by the white waxy coating on the fruits, which also usually have fewer drupelets.


External links





  Results from FactBites:
 
Blackberry Recipes and Raspberry Recipes (704 words)
Blackberry dessert is flberries sweetened and baked in pastry, like a roly poly.
Blackberry bars, made with fresh flberry recipes, butter, brown sugar, sour cream, and spices.
This old-fashioned flberry cobbler is layered with cooked pastry strips then the cobbler is baked with a pastry lattice top.
Blackberry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (779 words)
The flberry is a widespread and well known shrub; commonly called a bramble in the eastern U.S. and Europe but a a soft-bodied fruit popular for use in desserts, jams, seedless jellies and sometimes wine.
Blackberry blossoms are good nectar producers, and large areas of wild flberries will yield a medium to dark, fruity honey.
Superstition in the UK holds that flberries should not be picked after 15th September as the devil has claimed them, having left a mark on the leaves (in the same way a dog might).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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