Puneet Varma (Editor)

Ribes cereum

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Grossulariaceae

Scientific name
  
Ribes cereum

Order
  
Saxifragales

Genus
  
Ribes

Rank
  
Species

Ribes cereum SEINet Arizona Chapter Ribes cereum

Similar
  
Ribes montigenum, Ribes lacustre, Ribes bracteosum, Ribes inerme, Ribes hudsonianum

Ribes cereum wax currants


Ribes cereum is a species of currant known by the common names wax currant and squaw currant (R. c. var. pedicellare is known as whisky currant). It is native to western North America, including British Columbia, Alberta, and much of the western United States, from Washington, Oregon, and California east as far as the western Dakotas and the Oklahoma Panhandle.

Contents

Ribes cereum Southwest Colorado Wildflowers Ribes 2

Ribes cereum grows in several types of habitat, including mountain forests in alpine climates, sagebrush, and woodlands. It can grow in many types of soils, including sandy soils and soil made of clay substrates, serpentine soils, and lava beds. This is a spreading or erect shrub growing 20 centimeters (8 inches) to 2 meters (80 inches) tall. It is aromatic, with a "spicy" scent. The stems are fuzzy and often very glandular, and lack spines and prickles. The leaves are somewhat rounded and divided into shallow lobes which are toothed along the edges. The leaves are hairless to quite hairy, and usually studded with visible resin glands, particularly around the edges. The inflorescence is a clustered raceme of 2 to 9 flowers. The small flower is tubular with the white to pink sepals curling open at the tips to form a corolla-like structure. Inside there are minute white or pinkish petals, five stamens, and a two protruding green styles. The fruit is a rather tasteless red berry up to a centimeter (0.4 inch) wide, with a characteristically long, dried flower remnant at the end.

Ribes cereum httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Uses

Ribes cereum Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Ribes cereum

The Zuni people use the berries of the pedicellare variety as food, and eat the leaves with uncooked mutton fat or deer fat.

Ribes cereum FileWax currant Ribes cereum berries closejpg Wikimedia Commons

Ribes cereum FileRibes cereum var cereum 1jpg Wikimedia Commons

Ribes cereum Wax Currant Squaw Currant Ribes cereum var cereum Synonyms

References

Ribes cereum Wikipedia