Vaccinium myrtillus

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vaccinium myrtillus
By Amédée Masclef, published in Atlas des plantes de France, 1891

Secure  (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Ericaceae
Genus: Vaccinium
Section: Vaccinium sect. Myrtillus
Species:
V. myrtillus
Binomial name
Vaccinium myrtillus
L. 1753
Synonyms[2]
  • Myrtillus niger Gilib.
  • Myrtillus sylvaticus Drejer
  • Vaccinium oreophilum Rydb.
  • Vitis-idaea myrtillus (L.) Moench

Vaccinium myrtillus or European blueberry is a holarctic species of shrub with edible fruit of blue color, known by the common names bilberry, blaeberry, wimberry, and whortleberry.[3] It is more precisely called common bilberry or blue whortleberry to distinguish it from other Vaccinium relatives.

Description

Vaccinium myrtillus is a small deciduous shrub that grows 4–20 in (10–51 cm) tall, heavily branched with upright, angular to narrow winged, green-colored branches that are glabrous. It grows rhizomes, creating extensive patches The shrub can live up to 30 years, with roots reaching depths of up to 1 meter. It has light green leaves that turn red in autumn and are simple and alternate in arrangement.[4] Leaves are 0.4–1.2 in (1.0–3.0 cm) long and ovate to lanceolate or broadly elliptic in shape, with glandular to finely toothed margins.[4] In winter, its foliage turns deep red and becomes deciduous.

Small, hermaphrodite flowers with thick stems grow individually from the leaf axils and nod downward. These flowers, blooming from April to May, have crowns 4 to 6 mm long that are greenish to reddish. The small calyx is fused with minimal lobes on the cup-shaped flower. The rounded, urn-shaped petals have short, curved lobes. The 8-10 stamens are short, and the anthers are awned and horned. The four- or five-chambered ovary is inferior with a long style.

From July to September, the plants produce black-blue, flattened, round fruits with a maximum diameter of 1 centimeter. These multi-seeded berries have calyx remnants on the tip and a blue-gray “frosted” appearance. Rarely, forms with white, yellow, red, or reddish-spotted berries occur. The small, brownish seeds are crescent-shaped. This species differs from the American blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) in that its anthocyanins, which produce color, are found in both the peel and the flesh.

Chromosome count is 2n=24.[5]

  • Rhizomes
    Rhizomes
  • Flowers on inflorescens
    Flowers on inflorescens
  • flower
    flower
  • Flower cross section
    Flower cross section
  • Mature Flowers
    Mature Flowers
  • Fruits
    Fruits
  • Fruit cross section showing red flesh(above) compared to Vaccinium uliginosum (below)
    Fruit cross section showing red flesh(above) compared to Vaccinium uliginosum (below)

Common names

Regional names include blaeberry (Scotland), urts or hurts (Cornwall and Devon),[6] hurtleberry,[7] myrtleberry,[8] wimberry, whinberry, winberry,[9] and fraughan.[10]

Distribution and habitat

Vaccinium myrtillus is a Holarctic species native to continental Europe, the British Isles, north and central Asia, Japan, Greenland, Iceland, Western Canada, and the Western United States. It occurs in the acidic soils of heaths, boggy barrens, moorlands, degraded meadows, open forests at the base of pine and mountain spruce forest, and parklands, slopes, and moraines at elevations up to 2350 meters.[11][12]

  • Habitat in the Spandau Forest, Germany
    Habitat in the Spandau Forest, Germany
  • Habitat in the understory of the pine forest of Czermnica, NW Poland
    Habitat in the understory of the pine forest of Czermnica, NW Poland
  • habitat near "Alpe Tre Potenze" Apennine Mountains, Italy
    habitat near "Alpe Tre Potenze" Apennine Mountains, Italy

Uses

corolla
is pink and shaped like an urn. The leaves are finely toothed and prominently veined on the lower surface.

The fruits will stain hands, teeth and tongue deep blue or purple while eating and so it was traditionally used as a dye for food and clothes in Britain.[13]

Bilberries

Fruit

Vaccinium myrtillus has been used for centuries in traditional medicine, particularly in traditional Austrian medicine as a tea or liqueur in attempts to treat various disorders.[14] Bilberry dietary supplements are marketed in the United States, although there is little evidence these products have any effect on health or diseases.[3]

In cooking, the bilberry fruit is commonly used for pies, tarts and flans, cakes, jams, muffins, cookies, sauces, syrups, juices, and candies.[3]

Leaves

In traditional medicine, bilberry leaves were used mainly for treating skin disorders.[3] Consuming the leaves may be unsafe.[3]

Harvesting

Although bilberries are in high demand by consumers in Northern Europe, the berries are harvested in the wild without any cultivation. Some authors state that opportunities exist to improve the crop if cultivated using common agricultural practices.[15]

Bilberries have dark red juice that stains hands

Chemistry

Bilberry and the related V. uliginosum both produce lignins, in part because they are used as defensive chemicals.[16] Although many plants change their lignin production – usually to increase it – to handle the stresses of climate change, lignin levels of both Vaccinium species appear to be unaffected.[16] The leaves contain catechins, tannins, quinic acid, arbutin, chlorogenic acid, various glycosides, the fruits contain anthocyanins, pectin, ursolic acid, chlorogenic acid, ascorbic acid.[17]

V. myrtillus contains a high concentration of triterpenes which remain under laboratory research for their possible biological effects.[18]

See also

References

  1. ^ NatureServe (2024). "Vaccinium myrtillus". Arlington, Virginia. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
  2. ^ Vaccinium myrtillus L. The Plant List
  3. ^ a b c d e "Bilberry". National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, US National Institutes of Health. 1 August 2020. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Vaccinium myrtillus". www.fs.usda.gov. Retrieved 2022-09-13.
  5. .
  6. .
  7. ^ "Vaccinium myrtillus". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 12 December 2017. citing Wiersema, J. H. & B. León (1999), World economic plants: a standard reference, and Huxley, A., ed. (1992), The new Royal Horticultural Society dictionary of gardening
  8. ^ "Bilberry, Blaeberry, Whortleberry, Whinberry, Windberry, Myrtle Berry, Vaccinium myrtillus". Wild Food UK. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  9. ^ Henley, Jon. Bilberries: the true taste of northern England, The Guardian, Monday 9 June 2008
  10. ^ "Fraughan is an anglicisation of the Irish word Fraochán (or heather fruit, as the plant is often found growing with heather)". téarma.ie.
  11. ^ "Vaccinium myrtillus Linnaeus". Flora of North America. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  12. ^ "Vaccinium myrtillus L." USDA Plants Database. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  13. ^ "Make Traditional Dyes – Bilberry Dye". Barley Hall. York Archaeological Trust, Arts Council England and VisitEngland. Archived from the original on 2012-04-21.
  14. PMID 23770053
    .
  15. .
  16. ^ .
  17. ^ "Vaccinium myrtillus". Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases. Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  18. PMID 23519009
    .

External links