9.
Vaccinium myrtillus
Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 349. 1753.
Whortleberry
Vaccinium
myrtillus
subsp.
oreophilum
(Rydberg) Á. Löve, D. Löve & B. M. Kapoor;
V. myrtillus
var.
oreophilum
(Rydberg) Dorn;
V. oreophilum
Rydberg
Plants
forming open colonies, 0.5-12 dm, rhizomatous; twigs green, conspicuously 3-angled, glabrous or minutely puberulent along grooves.
Leaf blades
bright green, broadly elliptic or ovate, 19-27 × 7-11 mm, margins sharply serrate, surfaces laxly glandular abaxially.
Flowers:
calyx green, lobes ± recurved (or absent and margins of tube sinuate), deltate, 0.4-0.6 mm, glabrous; corolla pink, cream, or greenish white, globose, 3-5 × 5-7 mm, thin, glaucous; filaments glabrous.
Berries
purple-black or bluish black, rarely reddish or red, 7-9 mm diam.
Seeds
ca. 1 mm.
2
n
= 24, 48.
Flowering late spring-summer. Heaths, montane heaths, boggy barrens, degraded meadows, open coniferous forests, oak parklands, disturbed or open birch woods, hummocky seepage slopes, moraines; 0-2600 m; Greenland; Alta., B.C.; Ariz., Colo., Idaho, Mont., Nev., N.Mex., Oreg., Utah, Wash.; Europe; e Asia (Japan).
Vaccinium myrtillus
fruits are popular in Europe and are known to possess antioxidants and other compounds beneficial to vascular health. Berries in Europe are extensively harvested from wild stands. In North America, the fruits were used by the Kootenai, Carrier, Shuswap, and other native tribes. The small plant and fruit sizes create challenges for commercialization in North America.
SELECTED REFERENCES Albert, T., O. Raspe, and A. L. Jacquemart. 2003. Clonal structure in
Vaccinium myrtillus
L. revealed by RAPD and AFLP markers. Int. J. Pl. Sci. 164: 649-655. Upton, R., ed. 2001. Bilberry Fruit:
Vaccinium myrtillus
L. Standards of Analysis, Quality Control, and Therapeutics. Santa Cruz.