Sambucus racemosa


Sambucus racemosa is a species of elder known by the common names red-berried elder and red elderberry. It produces a red drupe.
The species is native across much of the Northern Hemisphere. The plant is largely poisonous when raw, but the fruit can be cooked for consumption.

Description

Sambucus racemosa is medium-sized shrub growing tall. The stems are soft, with a broad pith.
Each individual leaf is composed of 5 to 7 leaflike leaflets, each of which is up to long, lance-shaped to narrowly oval, and irregularly serrated along the edges. The leaflets have a strong disagreeable scent when crushed.
The inflorescence is a vaguely cone-shaped panicle diameter, consisting of several cymes of flowers and produced on the ends of stem branches. The flower buds are pink when closed, and the open flowers are white, cream, or yellowish. Each flower has small, recurved petals and a star-shaped axis of five white stamens tipped in yellow anthers. The flowers are fragrant and visited by flies, hummingbirds and butterflies.
The fruit is a bright red drupe containing 3 to 5 seeds. It is eaten by birds, which disperse the seeds in their droppings. Its fruit persists for an average of 42.5 days, and bears an average of 3.0 seeds per fruit. Fruits average 88.0% water, and their dry weight includes 8.3% carbohydrates and 9.0% lipids, which is one of the highest lipid values among European fleshy fruits.

Varieties and subspecies

Other subspecies formerly included in S. racemosa include S. racemosa subsp. kamtschatica, S. racemosa subsp. sibirica, and S. racemosa subsp. sieboldiana.

Distribution and habitat

It is native to Europe, northern temperate Asia, and North America across Canada and the United States. It grows in riparian environments, woodlands, and other habitats, generally in moist areas.

Cultivation

Sambucus racemosa is cultivated as an ornamental plant, for use as a shrub or small tree in traditional and wildlife gardens, and natural landscape design projects. The yellow-foliaged cultivars 'Plumosa Aurea' and 'Sutherland Gold' are widely grown in Britain.

Cultivars

Cultivars in the nursery trade include:
  • Sambucus racemosa 'SMNSRD4' Lemony Lace® — golden green foliage, with red new growth
  • Sambucus racemosa 'Sutherland Gold' — green foliage, with bronze new growth: it has received the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

    Toxicity

The stems, roots and foliage are poisonous, and the fruit can be toxic or cause nausea if eaten raw.

Uses

Although potentially poisonous when raw, the berries are reportedly safe to eat. They were cooked in a variety of recipes by indigenous peoples, including the Apache, Gitxsan, Goshute, Makah, Nuxalk, Ojibwe, Quileute, Skokomish, and Yurok peoples.
The plant has been used as a traditional medicine by Native Americans, including the Dakelh, Gitxsan, Hesquiaht, Menominee, Nuxalk, Northern Paiute, Ojibwe, Southern Paiute, Potawatomi, Tlingit, and Haida peoples. The uses included as an emetic, antidiarrheal, cold and cough remedy, dermatological and gynecological aid.

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