GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Plant Science (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/plant-science/)
-   -   Raspberry nomenclature (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/plant-science/81430-raspberry-nomenclature.html)

Mike Lyle 24-07-2004 10:41 AM

Raspberry nomenclature
 
This week we've talked a little of Rubus occidentalis, the black
raspberry, in uk.rec.gardening. It was new to me, and I looked at a
few websites. I found that I myself would probably have called it a
bramble, or blackberry: the plant looks that way, and even roots at
the tip like a bramble and unlike more familiar raspberries, cvs and
xx of Rubus idaeus. It seems that people call it a 'raspberry' because
the berries come away hollow when picked.

Insofar as vernacular names matter at all to botanists, does science
call this species a raspberry?

Mike.

Gene Newcomb 27-07-2004 06:55 PM

Raspberry nomenclature
 
Black raspberries (Rubus occidentalis) or blackcaps are a minor crop
here in Oregon. As you say, they do root at the shoot tips like
blackberries, but they are a distinctly different plant with fruits
which detach from the receptacle like the more commonly grown red
raspberry. The color of the stems in the winter is a smoky red-purple
that makes the fields easy to identify then. I don't know whether it is
still true, but one of the main uses of the juice of this fruit was as
the pigment for the grading stamps for meat here in the US. The common
names above are those accepted here in the US. See the book Scientific
and Common Names of 7,000 Vascular Plants in the United States by L.
Brako, A.Y. Rossman and D.F. Farr, APS Press, 1995.

Mike Lyle wrote:

This week we've talked a little of Rubus occidentalis, the black
raspberry, in uk.rec.gardening. It was new to me, and I looked at a
few websites. I found that I myself would probably have called it a
bramble, or blackberry: the plant looks that way, and even roots at
the tip like a bramble and unlike more familiar raspberries, cvs and
xx of Rubus idaeus. It seems that people call it a 'raspberry' because
the berries come away hollow when picked.

Insofar as vernacular names matter at all to botanists, does science
call this species a raspberry?

Mike.




Mike Lyle 02-08-2004 05:45 PM

Raspberry nomenclature
 
Gene Newcomb wrote in message ...
Black raspberries (Rubus occidentalis) or blackcaps are a minor crop
here in Oregon. As you say, they do root at the shoot tips like
blackberries, but they are a distinctly different plant with fruits
which detach from the receptacle like the more commonly grown red
raspberry. The color of the stems in the winter is a smoky red-purple
that makes the fields easy to identify then. I don't know whether it is
still true, but one of the main uses of the juice of this fruit was as
the pigment for the grading stamps for meat here in the US. The common
names above are those accepted here in the US. See the book Scientific
and Common Names of 7,000 Vascular Plants in the United States by L.
Brako, A.Y. Rossman and D.F. Farr, APS Press, 1995.


Many thanks.

Mike.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:24 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter