Category:Vaccinium
Vaccinium | |
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Vaccinium berries, from top left clockwise: Red huckleberries, cranberries, lingonberries and blueberries | |
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Genus: | Vaccinium |
Type species | |
Vaccinium uliginosum[1] | |
Synonyms[2] | |
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Vaccinium /vækˈsɪniəm/[3] is a common and widespread genus of shrubs or dwarf shrubs in the heath family. The fruits of many species are eaten by humans and some are of commercial importance, including the cranberry, blueberry, bilberry or whortleberry, lingonberry or cowberry, and huckleberry. Like many other ericaceous plants, they are generally restricted to acidic soils.
Description
The plant structure varies between species: some trail along the ground, some are dwarf shrubs, and some are larger shrubs perhaps 1 to 2 m (3 to 7 ft) tall. The fruit develops from an inferior ovary, and is a berry; it is usually brightly coloured, often being red or bluish with purple juice.
Taxonomy
The genus was first described scientifically by Carl Linnaeus in 1753.[1] The name vaccinium was used in classical Latin for a plant, possibly the bilberry or a hyacinth, and may be derived from the Latin bacca, berry, although its ultimate derivation is obscure.[4][5] It is not the same word as vaccinum "of or pertaining to cows".[6]
The taxonomy of the genus is complex, and still under investigation. Genetic analysis indicates that the genus Vaccinium is not monophyletic.[7] A number of the Asian species are more closely related to Agapetes than to other Vaccinium species.[7][8] A second group includes most of Orthaea and Notopora, at least some of Gaylussacia (huckleberry), and a number of species from Vaccinium, such as Vaccinium crassifolium.[7] Other parts of Vaccinium form other groups, sometimes together with species of other genera.[7]Vaccinium's taxonomy can either be resolved by enlarging the genus to include the entirety of the Vaccinieae tribe, or by breaking the genus up into several different genera.[7]
Subgenera
A classification predating molecular phylogeny divides Vaccinium into subgenera, and several sections:
- Subgenus Oxycoccus
- The cranberries, with slender, trailing, wiry non-woody shoots and strongly reflexed flower petals. Some botanists treat Oxycoccus as a distinct genus.
- Sect. Oxycoccus
- Vaccinium macrocarpon – American cranberry
- Vaccinium oxycoccos – Common cranberry
- Vaccinium microcarpum – Small bog cranberry[9][10]
- Sect. Oxycoccoides
- Vaccinium erythrocarpum – Southern mountain cranberry
- Subgenus Vaccinium
- All the other species, with thicker, upright woody shoots and bell-shaped flowers
- Sect. Batodendron
- Vaccinium arboreum – Sparkleberry
- Vaccinium crassifolium – Creeping blueberry
- Sect. Brachyceratium
- Sect. Bracteata
- Vaccinium acrobracteatum
- Vaccinium barandanum
- Vaccinium bracteatum
- Vaccinium coriaceum
- Vaccinium cornigerum
- Vaccinium cruentum
- Vaccinium hooglandii
- Vaccinium horizontale
- Vaccinium laurifolium
- Vaccinium lucidum
- Vaccinium myrtoides
- Vaccinium phillyreoides
- Vaccinium reticulatovenosum
- Vaccinium sparsum
- Vaccinium varingifolium
- Sect. Ciliata
- Sect. Cinctosandra
- Sect. Conchophyllum
- Sect. Cyanococcus – typical North American blueberries
- Vaccinium angustifolium – Lowbush blueberry - also knowns as Vaccinium stenophyllum[11]
- Vaccinium boreale – Northern blueberry
- Vaccinium caesariense – New Jersey blueberry
- Vaccinium caespitosum – Dwarf blueberry (dwarf bilberry)
- Vaccinium corymbosum – Highbush blueberry
- Vaccinium darrowii – Evergreen blueberry
- Vaccinium elliottii – Elliott's blueberry
- Vaccinium formosum
- Vaccinium fuscatum – Black highbush blueberry; syn. V. atrococcum
- Vaccinium hirsutum
- Vaccinium myrsinites – Evergreen blueberry
- Vaccinium myrtilloides – Canadian blueberry
- Vaccinium pallidum Ait. – Dryland blueberry (images[12]); syn. V. vacillans Torr.
- Vaccinium simulatum
- Vaccinium tenellum
- Vaccinium virgatum – Rabbiteye blueberry; syn. V. ashei
- Sect. Eococcus
- Sect. Epigynium
- Sect. Galeopetalum
- Sect. Hemimyrtillus
- Sect. Koreanum
- Vaccinium koreanum – Korean blueberry
- Sect. Myrtillus (including sect. Macropelma) – bilberries and relatives
- Vaccinium calycinum Sm. – Ōhelo kau laʻau (Hawaiʻi)
- Vaccinium cereum (L.f.) Forst.f. – East Polynesian blueberry, Pacific blueberry
- Vaccinium cespitosum – Dwarf bilberry
- Vaccinium deliciosum – Cascade bilberry, Cascade blueberry, blueleaf huckleberry
- Vaccinium dentatum Sm. – Ōhelo (Hawaiʻi)
- Vaccinium membranaceum – Square-twig blueberry, thinleaf huckleberry, tall huckleberry, big huckleberry, mountain huckleberry, "black huckleberry"
- Vaccinium myrtillus – Common bilberry, blue whortleberry, blaeberry, fraughan, hurtleberry
- Vaccinium ovalifolium – Alaska blueberry, early blueberry, oval-leaf blueberry
- Vaccinium parvifolium – Red huckleberry
- Vaccinium praestans – Krasnika (Russian: Красника)
- Vaccinium reticulatum – Ōhelo ʻai (Hawaiʻi)
- Vaccinium scoparium – Grouse whortleberry, grouseberry, littleleaf huckleberry
- Sect. Neurodesia
- Sect. Oarianthe
- Sect. Oreades
- Sect. Pachyanthum
- Sect. Polycodium
- Vaccinium stamineum L. – Deerberry; syn. V. caesium (eastern North America) (images[13])
- Sect. Pyxothamnus
- Vaccinium consanguineum
- Vaccinium floribundum
- Vaccinium ovatum Pursh – California huckleberry (or evergreen huckleberry) (coastal western North America)
- Sect. Vaccinium
- Vaccinium uliginosum L. – Northern (or bog) bilberry (or blueberry); syn. V. occidentale (northern North America and Eurasia)
- Sect. Vitis-idaea
- Vaccinium vitis-idaea L. – Partridgeberry, cowberry, redberry, red whortleberry, or lingonberry (northern North America and Eurasia)
Distribution and habitat
The genus contains about 450 species,[14] which are found mostly in the cooler areas of the Northern Hemisphere, although there are tropical species from areas as widely separated as Madagascar and Hawaii.
Plants of this group typically require acidic soils, and as wild plants they live in habitats such as heath, bog and acidic woodland (for example, blueberries under oaks or pines). Blueberry plants are commonly found in oak-heath forests in eastern North America.[15][16]
Ecology
Vaccinium species are used as food plants by the larvae of a number of Lepidoptera (butterfly and moth) species – see list of Lepidoptera that feed on Vaccinium.
Production
Production tonnes. Figures 2003–2004 | |||||
United States | 280,503 | 80% | 270,000 | 78% | |
Canada | 52,651 | 15% | 53,400 | 16% | |
Belarus | 8,000 | 2% | 10,000 | 3% | |
Latvia | 8,000 | 2% | 8,000 | 2% | |
Azerbaijan | 2,000 | 1% | 1,500 | 0% | |
Ukraine | 1,000 | 0% | 1,000 | 0% | |
Tunisia | 50 | 0% | 50 | 0% | |
Turkey | 50 | 0% | 50 | 0% | |
Total | 352 254 | 100% | 344 000 | 100% |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Vaccinium Linnaeus". Index Nominum Genericorum. International Association for Plant Taxonomy. 2003-02-05. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
- ↑ Flora of North America, Vaccinium Linnaeus, 1753
- ↑ Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
- ↑ Hyam, R. & Pankhurst, R.J. (1995). Plants and their names : a concise dictionary. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-866189-4. p. 515.
- ↑ Coombes, Allen J. (1994). Dictionary of Plant Names. London: Hamlyn Books. ISBN 978-0-600-58187-1. p. 187.
- ↑ P.G.W. Glare, ed. (1996). Oxford Latin Dictionary. p. 2000. ISBN 0-19-864224-5.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Kathleen A. Kron, E. Ann Powell and J. L. Luteyn (2002). "Phylogenetic relationships within the blueberry tribe (Vaccinieae, Ericaceae) based on sequence data from MATK and nuclear ribosomal ITS regions, with comments on the placement of Satyria". American Journal of Botany. 89 (2): 327–336. doi:10.3732/ajb.89.2.327. PMID 21669741.
- ↑ "Vaccinium". Flora of China.
- ↑ GBIF: Vaccinium microcarpum. Linked 2016-10-17
- ↑ EOL: Vaccinium microcarpum. Linked 2016-10-17
- ↑ Tropicos: Vaccinium stenophyllum
- ↑ "Bioimages". www.cas.Vanderbilt.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- ↑ "Bioimages". www.cas.Vanderbilt.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- ↑ "vaccinium species". Retrieved 20 August 2016.
- ↑ "The Natural Communities of Virginia Classification of Ecological Community Groups (Version 2.3), Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, 2010". Virginia.gov. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- ↑ Schafale, M. P. and A. S. Weakley (1990). Classification of the natural communities of North Carolina: third approximation. North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation.
External links
- Vaccinium information from U.S. National Plant Germplasm System
- British Towns and Villages Network, Vaccinium; Species of the Genus Vaccinium
Acknowledgements
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Vaccinium, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Pages in category "Vaccinium"
The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total.
V
- Vaccinium angustifolium
- Vaccinium arboreum
- Vaccinium caesariense
- Vaccinium cespitosum
- Vaccinium corymbosum
- Vaccinium crassifolium
- Vaccinium darrowii
- Vaccinium elliottii
- Vaccinium erythrocarpum
- Vaccinium floribundum
- Vaccinium macrocarpon
- Vaccinium membranaceum
- Vaccinium myrsinites
- Vaccinium myrtilloides
- Vaccinium myrtillus
- Vaccinium ovalifolium
- Vaccinium ovatum
- Vaccinium oxycoccos
- Vaccinium pallidum
- Vaccinium parvifolium
- Vaccinium reticulatum
- Vaccinium scoparium
- Vaccinium uliginosum
- Vaccinium virgatum
- Vaccinium vitis-idaea