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Ribes oxyacanthoides
Species of flowering plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ribes oxyacanthoides is a North American species of gooseberry known by the common name Canadian gooseberry. Its various subspecies have common names of their own.
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Description
In general, this plant is a shrub growing 0.5 to 2 metres (1+1⁄2 to 6+1⁄2 ft) in height.[3] The ssp. hendersonii is sometimes smaller at maturity. The branches are covered in prickles and there are spines up to 1.3 centimetres (1⁄2 in) long at stem nodes.[4] The deciduous leaves are 0.5 to 1.5 cm (1⁄4 to 5⁄8 in) wide, and smooth to glandular-hairy.[3]
Flowers are solitary or borne in pairs or threes. They are white or pinkish in color. The fruit is a palatable berry up to 1.6 cm (5⁄8 in) wide;[3][4] it is reddish, greenish, purple, or black in color.[5]
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Subspecies
Subspecies include:[4][6][5]
- R. o. ssp. cognatum (Umatilla gooseberry, stream currant) – Pacific Northwest
- R. o. ssp. hendersonii (Henderson's gooseberry) – Idaho, Montana, and Nevada
- R. o. ssp. irriguum (Idaho gooseberry, inland black gooseberry[7]) – Pacific Northwest
- R. o. ssp. oxyacanthoides (northern gooseberry) – from Alaska to Newfoundland
- R. o. ssp. setosum (inland gooseberry, Missouri gooseberry) – Rocky Mountains and adjacent regions
The subspecies were previously considered to be five separate species of plant. They intergrade in some regions.[4] These subspecies are sometimes called varieties.[5]
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Distribution and habitat
The shrub is native to North America, where it occurs in Alaska through much of Canada and the western and north-central United States.[4][8]
It grows in many types of habitat, particularly riverbanks and riparian woodlands. It grows in boreal forest habitat, often among conifers at lower elevations. Some subspecies occur at higher elevations, such as the dwarf ssp. hendersonii, which can be found in mountain talus.[4]
Ecology
This plant is an alternate host for the white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola), the vector of a pine tree disease. It is sometimes eradicated in attempts to control the rust.[4]
Small amounts of this shrub and its fruit are present in the diets of wildlife species such as grizzly bear and mule deer.[4]
Uses
Humans find the berry somewhat palatable.[4] Many Native American groups collected and stored it for food. The Ojibwa cooked and ate it with sweet corn and made it into preserves, for example. The root was used medicinally.[9]
References
External links
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