Index- plants in this Family
Rosaceae / Rose
Purple-flowering Raspberry (Rubus odoratus)
Plant Type: This is a shrub which can reach 180cm tall (70inches).
Leaves: The leaves are alternate. Leaves can be as wide as 25 cm (10inches). Each leaf is toothed and usually has 5 lobes (sometimes 3) similar to a maple leaf. The leaf veins, petioles and young stems covered with reddish glandular hairs (trichomes)
Flowers: The flowers have 5 Regular Parts and are up to 5cm wide (2 inches). They are rich pink. Blooms first appear in early summer and continue into early fall. Flowers are usually in loose clusters.
Fruit: A red berry that looks like a raspberry when mature.
Bark: The bark of the mature stem with loose pealing sections.
Habitat: Rocky woods and thickets.
Range: From Nova Scotia south to Georgia.

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Daniel Reed

This member of the rose family has no thorns. The new stems do have bristly hairs. It is the only Rubus species in our area without divided leaves.


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More Info:  
The Search below may provide more information about this species. Some of URLs may have been used as a source for this page not otherwise cited. Most of the information not cited comes from multiple sources that can be found in the Books page. The USDA plant links are provided by: USDA, NRCS 1999. The PLANTS database (http://plants.usda.gov/). National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70874-4490 USA. You can check species names at ITIS Advanced Search to see if they meet the current ITIS taxonomic criteria.
 

By: Newcomb, Lawrence and Illustrated by Morrison, Gordon. 1977, Little, Brown and Company, ISBN:0-316-60442-9

One of the best general guides to wildflowers of the North Eastern and North Central United States. Newcomb's key is an excellent, simple method for identifying plants. Newcomb has drawings for almost every plant mentioned that are excellent aids to identifying the species. Though only the more common plants are covered this is often the first book I pick up when trying to identify a wildflower.


Wildflo wers of Tennessee the Ohio Valley and the Southern Appalachians
By: Dennis Horn and Tavia Cathcart and Thomas E. Hemmerly and David Duhl. , ISBN:1551054280

This is perhaps the best of many field guides covering this region. Featuring 446 excellent color photographs (located with the text) and mentioning as similar to those illustrated are another 800 or so species for a total coverage of over 1,200 species. The start of each family section includes line drawings of some of the species showing important features. The text includes the usual description, bloom season, range, habitat and additionally includes information such as medical uses and lore and how the species was named. This is the official field guide of the Tennessee Native Plant Society.



Classification:  
Kingdom
Plantae
Plants
|Division
Magnoliophyta
Angiosperms / Flowering Plants
|Class
Magnoliopsida
Dicots / Two Seed Leaves
|Subclass
Rosidae
Rose
||Family
Rosaceae
Rose
|Subfamily

|Tribe

|Genus
Rubus
Blackberry

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www.2bnTheWild.com - Wildflowers of the Southeastern United States, Page updated on 7/20/2001 7:22:14 AM.