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Brief Summary

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Fragaria virginiana, Virginia strawberry (also known as mountain or wild strawberry), is a low-growing herbaceous perennial in the Rosaceae (rose family) native north temperate regions of North America, where it is wildly distributed from Newfoundland west to Alberta, and southward to Georgia, Tennessee, and Oklahoma, as well as in the Klamath, Cascade, and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges. The fruits are often collected in the wild, and this species is one of the progenitors (along with F. chiloensis) of the hybrid F.X ananassa, the garden or pineapple strawberry, which produces the bulk of commercially harvested strawberries. F. virginiana plants are characterized by basal rosette of compound leaves, 2.5 to 10 cm (1 to 4 in) long, with 3 leaflets, each having 4 to 8 pairs of teeth. The plants are characterized by long arching runners or stolons, and that allow them to reproduce vegetatively as well as by seed. The small, white, 5-parted flowers, 0.5 to 2.5 cm (0.25 to 1 in) across, occur in small clusters. The strawberries are quite small, 0.5 to 2 cm (0.25 to 0.75 in) across, and generally ripen to red. The strawberry is not a true berry, but is a fleshy receptable bearing multiple fruits on the surface—these apparent seeds are actually achenes, small, one-seeded fruits with hard coverings that do not split open (dehisce) when ripe. The achenes on F. virginiana occur in deep pits (as opposed to projecting from the surface, as in the related and often co-occuring F. vesca, woodland strawberry). Virginia strawberries are often wild-harvested, and sometimes cultivated. The small strawberries may be eaten fresh, cooked, or dried. They were important to indigenous people in the Great Lakes and Midwestern Prairie regions and Canada, who used the fruits for food, and prepared tea from the leaves. This species generally grows at altitudes between 1200 and 3300 m. It has a wide distribution in North America, and may grow in hardwood, conifer, and mixed forests, as well swamps (but not in the wettest parts), shores, and clearings. It may be found in drier and sunnier sites than F. vesca. (Bailey et al. 1976, Flora of China 2012, Michigan Flora Online 2011, USDA 2006, van Wyk 2005.)
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Jacqueline Courteau
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Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Fragaria virginiana Duchesne, Hist. Nat. Frais. 204. 1766. > ">l
Fragaria vesca Walt. Fl. Car. 150. 1788. Not«F. vesca I,, 1753. Fragaria canadensis Michx. Fl. Bor. Am. 1 : 299, in part. 1803. Fragaria elalior Raf. Atl. Jour. 152. 1832. Not F. elaiior Khrh. 1793.
Rootstock thick and short ; leaves moderately thick, or in shaded places rather thin, sometimes dark-green, not glaucous, slightly silky when young, glabrate in age; petioles 2-30 cm. long, with spreading hairs, rather stout ; leaflets 3-10 cm. long, obovate or oblong, always petiolulate, coarsely toothed, obtuse at the apex ; runners long and rather stout ; scape, stout, more or less villous with spreading hairs, generally 1.5-2 dm. high, often with a foliaceous bract and rather many-flowered ; pedicels appressed-hairy ; flowers 1-2 cm. in diameter ; bractlets and sepals lanceolate, acute or acuminate ; petals obovate, usually exceeding the sepals by a half; fruit 1-1.5 cm. in diameter, subglobose; achenes set in deep pits.
Type locality : Virginia.
Distribution : From Prince Edward Island to Minnesota, Indian Territory, and Georgia ;
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bibliographic citation
Per Axel Rydberg. 1908. ROSACEAE (pars). North American flora. vol 22(4). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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North American Flora

Fragaria virginiana

provided by wikipedia EN

Fragaria virginiana, known as Virginia strawberry, wild strawberry, common strawberry, or mountain strawberry, is a North American strawberry that grows across much of the United States and southern Canada.[1][2] It is one of the two species of wild strawberry that were hybridized to create the modern domesticated garden strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa).[3]

Subspecies

There are four recognized subspecies:

  • Fragaria virginiana subsp. glauca (formerly known as F. ovalis)
  • Fragaria virginiana subsp. grayana
  • Fragaria virginiana subsp. platypetala
  • Fragaria virginiana subsp. virginiana

Cytology

Fragaria virginiana var. platypetala usually has dense and spreading pubescence on flower and leaf stalks as illustrated by this individual.
The fruit is a reddish, fleshy aggregate dotted with "seeds" (achenes) up to 1 cm.

All strawberries have a base haploid count of 7 chromosomes. Fragaria virginiana is octoploid, having eight sets of these chromosomes for a total of 56. These eight genomes pair as four distinct sets, of two different types, with little or no pairing between sets. The genome composition of the octoploid strawberry species has generally been indicated as AAA'A'BBB'B'. The A-type genomes were likely contributed by diploid ancestors related to Fragaria vesca or similar species, while the B-type genomes seem to descend from a close relative of Fragaria iinumae. The exact process of hybridization and speciation which resulted in the octoploid species is still unknown, but it appears that the genome compositions of both Fragaria chiloensis and Fragaria virginiana (and by extension their hybrid, the cultivated octoploid garden strawberry as well) are identical.[4]

Description

Fragaria virginiana, Saint-Prosper-de-Champlain, Quebec, Canada

Fragaria virginiana can grow up to 100 mm (4 in) tall. The plant typically bears numerous trifoliate leaves that are green on top, pale green on the lower surface. Each leaflet is about 75 mm (3 in) long and 40 mm (1+12 in) wide. The leaflet is oval shaped and has coarse teeth along the edge except near the bottom. This plant has a five-petaled white flower with numerous pistils, surrounded by yellow-anthered stamens. There are ten small green sepals under the petals. The seeds of this plant are developed from the pistils in the centre of the flower which will become dark-coloured fruit (achenes) on the strawberry.[5] The fruit of the wild strawberry is smaller than that of the garden strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa). Botanically, the fruit is classified as an aggregate accessory fruit, but it is commonly called a berry.[6][1] Strawberries reproduce both sexually by seed, and asexually by runners (stolons).

Taxonomy

Fragaria virginiana Mill. is considered to be the valid name for this plant by a number of authorities[7][8] (and was described by Philip Miller in 1768[9] in the eighth edition of The Gardeners Dictionary).[8] According to the International Plant Names Index the name, Fragaria virginiana Duchesne, published by Antoine Nicolas Duchesne in 1766,[10] is an invalid name.[8] However, other authorities consider the valid name to be Fragaria virginiana Duchesne.[11][12]

Uses

The berries are edible.[13] A popular type called "Little Scarlet" is grown in Great Britain, having been imported from the United States in the early 1900s.

Similar species

The plants resemble Hesperochiron pumilus, but have distinct leaves and more than five stamens.[14]

References

  1. ^ a b "Fragaria virginiana (common strawberry)". Go Botany. New England Wildflower Society. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  2. ^ Jepson Manual Treatment
  3. ^ "Strawberry, The Maiden With Runners". Botgard.ucla.edu. Archived from the original on 6 July 2010.
  4. ^ Morphological and molecular variation among populations of octoploid Fragaria virginiana and F. chiloensis (Rosaceae) from North America. Harrison R, Luby J, Furnier G, Hancock J., Am J Bot. 1997 May;84(5):612., pp. 612–620.
  5. ^ Wendy Deng and Charlie Marshall, Characteristic point, "Fragaria virginiana (Wild Strawberry) Rosaceae", Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  6. ^ "Fragaria virginiana". Plant Finder. Missouri Botanical Garden. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  7. ^ "Tropicos | Name - !Fragaria virginiana Mill". legacy.tropicos.org. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  8. ^ a b c "International Plant Names Index: Fragaria virginiana". www.ipni.org. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  9. ^ The Gardeners Dictionary (8 ed.). 1768.
  10. ^ Histoire Naturelle des Fraisiers. Paris. 1766.
  11. ^ "ITIS Standard Report Page: Fragaria virginiana". www.itis.gov. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  12. ^ "UC/JEPS: Jepson Manual treatment for FRAGARIA virginiana". ucjeps.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  13. ^ Fagan, Damian (2019). Wildflowers of Oregon: A Field Guide to Over 400 Wildflowers, Trees, and Shrubs of the Coast, Cascades, and High Desert. Guilford, CT: FalconGuides. p. 83. ISBN 1-4930-3633-5. OCLC 1073035766.
  14. ^ Taylor, Ronald J. (1994) [1992]. Sagebrush Country: A Wildflower Sanctuary (rev. ed.). Missoula, MT: Mountain Press Pub. Co. p. 172. ISBN 0-87842-280-3. OCLC 25708726.

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wikipedia EN

Fragaria virginiana: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Fragaria virginiana, known as Virginia strawberry, wild strawberry, common strawberry, or mountain strawberry, is a North American strawberry that grows across much of the United States and southern Canada. It is one of the two species of wild strawberry that were hybridized to create the modern domesticated garden strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa).

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