Blackberry

Prepared by Jennifer L. D’Appollonio, Assistant Scientist, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469. Updated February 2018.

Scientific name: Rubus spp.

Common name(s): blackberry, bramble

Links: USDA PLANTS Profile, NPIN Profile, Go Botany

Images: (to see enlargements [PC]: click on image, then right click and choose “view image”)

Description:

-Rosaceae family

– two types of canes: primocanes (1st yr, vegetative) and floricanes (2nd yr, bears flowers)

Leaves are

  • palmate
  • 5-7 leaflets
  • floricane leaves can have 3 leaflets

– large prickles similar to rose thorns, sometimes hairy branches 4″-12″ long.

– can be difficult to identify species without flowers/fruit, both because Rubus species hybrids are common and because plants in wild blueberry fields are mowed/burned regularly

– may be confused with other Rubus such as raspberries and black raspberries, but fruit ripens later and center portion (rasp) comes off with the fruit (not hollow as in raspberries)

– generally flowers late May to late July in ME

Habitat:

-full sun

-well drained soil

Wildlife Benefits:

-attracts nectar feeding butterflies

-birds and small mammals eat the fruit

-birds nest in the brambles and mammals use it as protection

Natural History:

-Bramble derived from “brymbyl” meaning prickly

 

Source(s):

Kagan , Carol. “Brambles (Rubus Spp.) — 2020 Herb of the Year.” Penn State Extension, 19 Jan. 2021, extension.psu.edu/brambles-rubus-spp-2020-herb-of-the-year.

Hansen, R.W., S.B. Hansen and E.A. Osgood. 1991. Reproductive phenologies of selected flowering plants in eastern Maine forests. ME Agric. Exp. Station Tech. Bull. 143. 17 pp.