Description:
This shrub develops first-year and second-year canes that are 2-6'
high; the canes often bend or arch to one side, sometimes touching the
ground at their tips. The slightly woody canes are light green to dark
red, stout, angular, furrowed or ridged, and glabrous; they have
sharp prickles less than ¼" long that are straight to slightly curved.
The alternate leaves are palmately compound. First-year canes have
palmate leaves with 5 leaflets; these leaflets are 3-5" long, 1-2¼"
across, elliptic to ovate, and sharply toothed. Second-year canes have
palmate leaves with 3 leaflets; these leaflets are similar to the
leaflets of first-year canes, except they are a little smaller in size.
The upper surface of the leaflets is medium green or yellowish green,
indented along the veins, and either hairless or sparsely covered with
appressed hairs. The lower surface of the leaflets is pale green with
prominent veins; the vein undersides are either hairless
or covered with appressed hairs, while the lower surface between the
veins is hairless to sparsely hairy. The basal stalklets (petiolules)
of the leaflets are light green or yellowish green and either
hairless or covered with appressed hairs; they vary in length from 1/8"
or 3 mm.
(for
lower lateral leaflets) to 1/2" or 6 mm. (for terminal leaflets). The
petioles
of the leaves are 2-4" long; they are light green to yellowish
green and either hairless or covered with appressed hairs. The
petioles have small prickles along their undersides. At the base of
each petiole, there is a pair of deciduous linear stipules (less than
½" long).
Second-year canes develop elongated racemes of 5-20 flowers
about 2-6" long. The peduncle and pedicels of each raceme are light
green to yellowish green and more or less covered with appressed woolly
hairs that are white to pale brown; these hairs are non-glandular. The
pedicels are ascending to widely spreading. The leafy bracts of each
raceme are small, inconspicuous, and deciduous. Individual flowers are
about ¾-1" across, consisting of 5 white petals, 5 light green sepals,
a greenish compound pistil with multiple styles, and a ring of many
stamens. The widely spreading petals are oblong to elliptic in shape,
while the sepals are lanceolate, recurved, and densely covered with
appressed white hairs. The blooming period occurs during the late
spring and lasts about 3 weeks. During the summer, the flowers are
replaced by fruits that are compound drupes. At maturity, these
compound drupes change from bright red to black; they are about
1/3-2/3" (8-16 mm.) in length and globoid to ovoid in shape. Each
drupelet of a
drupe contains a single yellow seed. Mature drupes are juicy and vary
in flavor from sour to sweet-tart. Second-year canes die down after
bearing fruits, but they are replaced by new canes from underground
runners.
Cultivation: The preference is full or partial sun,
moist to dry-mesic conditions, and soil containing loam, silt, sand, or
gravel. At drier sites, this blackberry does better when it receives
some protection from the afternoon sun.
Range
& Habitat: The
native Highbush Blackberry is occasional to locally common in most
areas of Illinois (see
Distribution
Map). It is less common in the
northern section of the state than elsewhere because Illinois lies
close to its northern range limit. Habitats include savannas and sandy
savannas, thickets and sandy thickets, riverbottom prairies
and moist sand prairies, woodland borders, and acidic gravelly
seeps. This blackberry is usually found in areas where there has been
some disturbance from natural or human-related causes. It is a pioneer
species.
Faunal Associations: The nectar and pollen of the flowers
attract
a variety of
insects, especially long-tongued and short-tongued bees. Other floral
visitors include wasps, flies, butterflies, and skippers. Other insects
feed on the foliage, bore through the canes, or use other parts of
blackberries as a food source. These species include the caterpillars
of
Satyrium liparops
strigosum (Striped Hairstreak); also the
caterpillars of such moths as
Chlorochlamys
chloroleuca
(Blackberry Looper Moth),
Olethreutes
permundana (Raspberry
Leafroller),
Pennisetia
marginata (Raspberry Crown Borer), and others. Additional
insect feeders include the larvae of
Hartigia
trimaculata (Rose Shoot Sawfly) and
Metallus rohweri
(Blackberry
Leafminer);
Trioza
tripunctata (Blackberry Psyllid); the
treehoppers
Stictocephala
albescens
and
Stictocephala
taurina;
Typhlocyba
rosae (Rose Leafhopper),
Erythroneura octonotata
(Eight-Spotted Leafhopper), and other leafhoppers; the aphids
Amphorophora sensoriata,
Aphis rubicola,
and
Aphis rubifolii;
the
plant bug
Dicyphus
famelicus; the larvae of such wood-boring beetles as
Agrilus ruficollis
(Red-Necked Cane Borer) and
Oberea
bimaculata
(Raspberry Cane Borer); the leaf beetles
Neochlamisus eubati
and
Neochlamisus gibbosus;
and
Byturus unicolor
(Raspberry Fruitworm
Beetle). The
Insect Table
provides a more complete listing of these
various insect species. The fruits of blackberries are an important
source of food to many upland gamebirds and songbirds (see
Bird
Table),
and they are also eaten by such mammals as the Black Bear, Gray Fox,
Red
Fox, Opossum, Raccoon, Striped Skunk, Fox Squirrel, Gray Squirrel, Red
Squirrel, Eastern Chipmunk, White-Footed Mouse, Woodland Deer Mouse,
and Jumping Mouse. Notwithstanding the prickles, both the Cottontail
Rabbit and White-Tailed Deer occasionally browse on the foliage and
tender first-year canes. Blackberry thickets also provide nesting
habitat for various songbirds, including the Cardinal, Yellow-Breasted
Chat, Indigo Bunting, and Field Sparrow. Such thickets also provide
good protective cover for many birds, mammals, and other wildlife.
Photographic Location: A moist sand prairie at the Indiana
Dunes
National Lakeshore in NW Indiana.
Comments:
Highbush Blackberry has a similar appearance to
Rubus allegheniensis
(Common Blackberry). Both of these species produce elongated racemes of
flowers (or drupes) that have small and insignificant bracts. While the
racemes of Highbush Blackberry have stalks with woolly non-glandular
hairs, the racemes of Common Blackberry have stalks with
sticky-glandular hairs. The drupes of Common Blackberry are usually
longer (½-¾" ) than those of Highbush Blackberry, its leaflets are
usually more broad in shape, and the petals of its flowers are slightly
wider and tend to overlap. With the exception of the presence or
absence of glandular hairs, these differences are more subtle than
dramatic. Another common species,
Rubus
pensilvanicus
(Leafy-Bracted Blackberry), produces its flowers (and drupes) in
flat-headed corymbs that have large leafy bracts. As a result, its
flowers and fruits are sometimes partially hidden by these bracts. In
the Rubus genus, there has been excessive taxonomic splitting in the
past. As a result, some older species of blackberry are now regarded as
variants of current species of blackberry;
Rubus ostryifolius
and several others are considered scientific synonyms of
Rubus
argutus
(Highbush Blackberry). Other common names of this species are Sawtooth
Blackberry, Sharp-Toothed Blackberry, and Florida Prickly Blackberry.