Anne Elliott's photos with the keyword: Thorny Buffaloberry

Thorny Buffaloberry

17 May 2008 216
This shrub is growing in Fish Creek Park, at Votier's Flats. Also saw another one at Inglewood Bird Sanctuary. It looks very similar to Canada Buffaloberry. Tiny (about 4 mm across), brownish yellow flowers, no petals, only 4 sepals. This photgraph shows a male specimen, as it has 8 stamens per flower. "Shepherdia argentea (Silver Buffaloberry or Bull berry, thorny buffaloberry) is a species of Shepherdia, native to central North America from southern Canada (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba) south in the United States to northern California and New Mexico. It is a deciduous shrub growing to 2-6 m tall. The leaves are arranged in opposite pairs (rarely alternately arranged), 2-6 cm long, oval with a rounded apex, green with a covering of fine silvery, silky hairs, more densely silvery below than above. The flowers are pale yellow, with four sepals and no petals. The fruit is a bright red fleshy drupe 5 mm in diameter; it is edible but with a rather bitter taste.[2] The berry is one of the mainstays of the diet of the Sharp-tailed Grouse, the provincial bird of Saskatchewan. The plant contains a low concentration of tetrahydroharmol, which acts as a psychedelic drug in high enough doses." From Wikipedia.

Thorny Buffaloberry

21 Apr 2010 186
Seen growing east of the city in the Shepard area. Thorny Buffaloberry (Shepherdia argentia) is a tall shrub or small tree is native, has spiny branches and young branches are silvery white. Flowers are yellowish brown, about 4 mm across. Each flower has four sepals, no petals. Blooms May-June. Berries are yellow to scarlet, edible but sour.