Rubus

Rubus is a large and diverse genus of flowering plants in the rose family, Rosaceae, subfamily Rosoideae, with over 1,350 species, commonly known as brambles.[3][4][5]

Rubus
Temporal range:
Rubus bush with ripe and unripe blackberries
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae
Subfamily: Rosoideae
Tribe: Rubeae
Genus: Rubus
L.[1]
Type species
Rubus fruticosus
L.[2]
Synonyms[3]
List
  • Ametron Raf.
  • Ampomele Raf.
  • Batidaea (Dumort.) Greene
  • Bossekia Neck. ex Greene
  • Calyctenium Greene
  • Cardiobatus Greene
  • Chamaemorus Hill
  • Comarobatia Greene
  • Cumbata Raf.
  • Cylactis Raf.
  • Dalibarda Kalm
  • Dyctisperma Raf.
  • Idaeobatus (Focke) Börner
  • Manteia Raf.
  • Melanobatus Greene
  • Oligacis Raf.
  • Oreobatus Rydb.
  • Parmena Greene
  • Psychrobatia Greene
  • Rubacer Rydb.
  • Selnorition Raf.

Raspberries, blackberries, and dewberries are common, widely distributed members of the genus, and bristleberries are endemic to North America. Most of these plants have woody stems with prickles like roses; spines, bristles, and gland-tipped hairs are also common in the genus. The Rubus fruit, sometimes called a bramble fruit, is an aggregate of drupelets. The term "cane fruit" or "cane berry" applies to any Rubus species or hybrid which is commonly grown with supports such as wires or canes, including raspberries, blackberries, and hybrids such as loganberry, boysenberry, marionberry and tayberry.[6] The stems of such plants are also referred to as canes.

Description

Bramble bushes typically grow as shrubs (though a few are herbaceous), with their stems being typically covered in sharp prickles.[7] They grow long, arching shoots that readily root upon contact with soil,[8] and form a soil rootstock from which new shoots grow in the spring.[9] The leaves are either evergreen or deciduous, and simple, lobed, or compound.[7] The shoots typically do not flower or set fruit until the second year of growth (i.e. they are biennial).[9] The rootstock is perennial.[10] Most species are hermaphrodites with male and female parts being present on the same flower.[7] Bramble fruits are aggregate fruits formed from smaller units called drupelets.[9]

Around 60-70% of species of Rubus are polyploid (having more than two pairs of each chromosome), with species ranging in ploidy from diploid (2x, with 14 chromosomes[11]) to tetradecaploid (14x).[12]

Taxonomy

Modern classification

Rubus is very complex, particularly within the blackberry/dewberry subgenus (Rubus), with polyploidy, hybridization, and facultative apomixis apparently all frequently occurring, making species classification of the great variation in the subgenus one of the grand challenges of systematic botany.

Some treatments have recognized dozens of species each for what other, comparably qualified botanists have considered single, more variable species. On the other hand, species in the other Rubus subgenera (such as the raspberries) are generally distinct, or else involved in more routine one-or-a-few taxonomic debates, such as whether the European and American red raspberries are better treated as one species or two (in this case, the two-species view is followed here, with R. idaeus and R. strigosus both recognized; if these species are combined, then the older name R. idaeus has priority for the broader species).

The classification presented below recognizes 13 subgenera within Rubus, with the largest subgenus (Rubus) in turn divided into 12 sections. Representative examples are presented, but many more species are not mentioned here. A comprehensive 2019 study found subgenera Orobatus and Anoplobatus to be monophyletic, while all other subgenera to be paraphyletic or polyphyletic.[13]

Phylogeny

The genus has a likely North American origin,[13] with fossils known from the Eocene-aged Florissant Formation of Colorado, around 34 million years old.[14] Rubus expanded into Eurasia, South America, and Oceania during the Miocene.[13] Fossil seeds from the early Miocene of Rubus have been found in the Czech part of the Zittau Basin.[15] Many fossil fruits of †Rubus laticostatus, †Rubus microspermus and †Rubus semirotundatus have been extracted from bore hole samples of the Middle Miocene fresh water deposits in Nowy Sacz Basin, West Carpathians, Poland.[16]

Molecular data have backed up classifications based on geography and chromosome number, but following morphological data, such as the structure of the leaves and stems, do not appear to produce a phylogenetic classification.[17]

Species

Rubus caesius berry
R. odoratus leaves and flower
R. saxatilis leaves and berries
R. idaeus leaves
Commercially produced R. strigosus raspberries
R. rosifolius leaves and berry
R. hirsutus flowers

Better-known species of Rubus include:

A more complete subdivision is as follows:

  • Subgenus Anoplobatus
  • Subgenus Chamaebatus
    • Rubus calycinus
    • Rubus hayata-koidzumii
    • Rubus nivalis
    • Rubus pectinellus
  • Subgenus Chamaemorus
  • Subgenus Comaropsis
    • Rubus geoides
  • Subgenus Cylactis
  • Subgenus Diemenicus
    • Rubus gunnianus
  • Subgenus Dalibardastrum
    • Rubus amphidasys
    • Rubus nepalensis
    • Rubus tricolor
    • Rubus tsangiorum
  • Subgenus Idaeobatus
    • Rubus acuminatissimus
    • Rubus adenophorus (syn. R. sagatus)
    • Rubus alexeterius
    • Rubus alpestris
    • Rubus amabilis
    • Rubus apetalus
    • Rubus archboldianus
    • Rubus aurantiacus
    • Rubus biflorus
    • Rubus chingii
    • Rubus cockburnianus
    • Rubus columellaris
    • Rubus copelandii
    • Rubus corchorifolius
    • Rubus coreanus
    • Rubus crataegifolius
    • Rubus croceacanthus
    • Rubus ellipticus
    • Rubus eustephanos
    • Rubus flosculosus
    • Rubus fraxinifolius
    • Rubus glabricarpus
    • Rubus grayanus
    • Rubus hawaiensis
    • Rubus hirsutus
    • Rubus hoffmeisterianus
    • Rubus hypargyrus
    • Rubus idaeus
    • Rubus illecebrosus
    • Rubus innominatus
    • Rubus inopertus
    • Rubus irritans
    • Rubus komarovii
    • Rubus lasiostylus
    • Rubus leucodermis
    • Rubus ludwigii
    • Rubus lutescens
    • Rubus macilentus
    • Rubus macraei
    • Rubus mesogaeus
    • Rubus microphyllus
    • Rubus minusculus
    • Rubus niveus
    • Rubus occidentalis
    • Rubus palmatus
    • Rubus parvifolius
    • Rubus peltatus
    • Rubus pentagonus
    • Rubus phoenicolasius
    • Rubus pileatus
    • Rubus pinfaensis
    • Rubus pinnatus
    • Rubus probus
    • Rubus pungens
    • Rubus queenslandicus
    • Rubus racemosus
    • Rubus rigidus
    • Rubus rosifolius
    • Rubus sachalinensis
    • Rubus simplex
    • Rubus spectabilis
    • Rubus stans
    • Rubus suavissimus
    • Rubus subornatus
    • Rubus sumatranus
    • Rubus teledapos
    • Rubus thibetanus
    • Rubus trianthus
    • Rubus trifidus
    • Rubus vernus
  • Subgenus Lampobatus
    • Rubus acanthophyllos
    • Rubus adenothallus
    • Rubus adenotrichos
    • Rubus betonicifolius
    • Rubus bogotensis
    • Rubus briareus
    • Rubus bullatus
    • Rubus choachiensis
    • Rubus coriaceus
    • Rubus costaricanus
    • Rubus eggersii
    • Rubus eriocarpus
    • Rubus fagifolius
    • Rubus florulentus
    • Rubus gachetensis
    • Rubus giganteus
    • Rubus glabratus
    • Rubus glaucus
    • Rubus hondurensis
    • Rubus imperialis
    • Rubus irasuensis
    • Rubus macvaughianus
    • Rubus megalococcus
    • Rubus nubigenus
    • Rubus peruvianus
    • Rubus roseus
    • Rubus sapidus
    • Rubus shankii
    • Rubus trichomallus
    • Rubus turquinensis
  • Subgenus Malachobatus
    • Rubus acuminatus
    • Rubus alceifolius
    • Rubus assamensis
    • Rubus bambusarum
    • Rubus buergeri
    • Rubus chroosepalus
    • Rubus chrysophyllus
    • Rubus elongatus
    • Rubus fairholmianus
    • Rubus flagelliflorus
    • Rubus fockei
    • Rubus formosensis
    • Rubus gardnerianus
    • Rubus glomeratus
    • Rubus henryi
    • Rubus hunanensis
    • Rubus ichangensis
    • Rubus irenaeus
    • Rubus kawakamii
    • Rubus lambertianus
    • Rubus lineatus
    • Rubus moluccanus
    • Rubus multibracteatus
    • Rubus paniculatus
    • Rubus parkeri
    • Rubus pseudosieboldii
    • Rubus pyrifolius
    • Rubus rolfei
    • Rubus rugosus
    • Rubus setchuenensis
    • Rubus sieboldii
    • Rubus splendidissimus
    • Rubus swinhoei
    • Rubus tephrodes
    • Rubus tiliaceus
    • Rubus wardii
    • Rubus xanthoneurus
  • Subgenus Micranthobatus
    • Rubus australis
    • Rubus cissoides
    • Rubus moorei
    • Rubus nebulosus
    • Rubus parvus
    • Rubus schmidelioides
    • Rubus squarrosus
  • Subgenus Orobatus
    • Rubus loxensis
  • Subgenus Rubus (formerly known as subgenus Eubatus)
    • Sections
      • Sect. Allegheniensis
      • Sect. Arguti
        • Rubus abactus
        • Rubus ablatus
        • Rubus andrewsianus
        • Rubus argutus
        • Rubus densissimus
        • Rubus frondosus – Yankee blackberry
        • Rubus laudatus
        • Rubus mollior
        • Rubus multispinus
        • Rubus oklahomus
        • Rubus orarius
        • Rubus ostryifolius
        • Rubus pensilvanicus
        • Rubus philadelphicus
        • Rubus recurvans – recurved blackberry
        • Rubus subsolanus
      • Sect. Caesii
      • Sect. Canadenses
        • Rubus canadensis
        • Rubus kennedyanus
      • Sect. Corylifolii
        • Rubus adenoleucus
        • Rubus aureolus
        • Rubus babingtonianus
        • Rubus britannicus
        • Rubus camptostachys
        • Rubus conjungens
        • Rubus cyclomorphus
        • Rubus dissimulans
        • Rubus dumetorum
        • Rubus eluxatus
        • Rubus fabrimontanus
        • Rubus fioniae
        • Rubus gothicus
        • Rubus lamprocaulos
        • Rubus mortensenii
        • Rubus nemorosus
        • Rubus seebergensis
        • Rubus tuberculatus
        • Rubus wahlbergii
      • Sect. Cuneifolii
        • Rubus cuneifolius
      • Sect. Hispidi
        • Rubus fulleri
        • Rubus hispidus
      • Sect. Procumbentes (formerly known as Sect. Flagellares)
        • Rubus aboriginum
        • Rubus baileyanus
        • Rubus bushii
        • Rubus celer
        • Rubus centralis
        • Rubus curtipes
        • Rubus deamii
        • Rubus depavitus
        • Rubus enslenii
        • Rubus exsularis
        • Rubus fecundus
        • Rubus ferrofluvius
        • Rubus flagellaris
        • Rubus fraternalis
        • Rubus grimesii
        • Rubus hancinianus
        • Rubus heterophyllus
        • Rubus invisus
        • Rubus ithacanus
        • Rubus kentuckiensis
        • Rubus leviculus
        • Rubus meracus
        • Rubus michiganensis
        • Rubus multifer – Kinnikinnick dewberry
        • Rubus multiformis
        • Rubus profusiflorus
        • Rubus roribaccus – Lucretia dewberry
        • Rubus satis
        • Rubus steelei
      • Sect. Rubus
        • Rubus acheruntinus
        • Rubus adornatus
        • Rubus adspersus
        • Rubus ahenifolius
        • Rubus alterniflorus
        • Rubus ammobius
        • Rubus amplificatus
        • Rubus anglocandicans
        • Rubus angustifrons
        • Rubus armeniacus (syn. R. discolor)
        • Rubus arrhenii
        • Rubus atrichantherus
        • Rubus axillaris
        • Rubus bakerianus
        • Rubus bavaricus
        • Rubus bayeri
        • Rubus bertramii
        • Rubus bifrons – Himalayan blackberry
        • Rubus bloxamianus
        • Rubus bloxamii
        • Rubus bollei
        • Rubus boreanus
        • Rubus braeuckeri
        • Rubus bregutiensis
        • Rubus calvatus
        • Rubus canescens – woolly blackberry
        • Rubus cardiophyllus
        • Rubus caucasicus
        • Rubus chlorothyrsos
        • Rubus chrysoxylon
        • Rubus cimbricus
        • Rubus cissburiensis
        • Rubus clusii
        • Rubus colemannii
        • Rubus concolor
        • Rubus conothyrsoides
        • Rubus cordifolius
        • Rubus cyri
        • Rubus dasyphyllus
        • Rubus divaricatus
        • Rubus diversus
        • Rubus drejeri
        • Rubus dumnoniensis
        • Rubus echinatoides
        • Rubus echinatus
        • Rubus egregius
        • Rubus eianus
        • Rubus ergii
        • Rubus errabundus
        • Rubus erythrops
        • Rubus fissus
        • Rubus foliosus
        • Rubus formidabilis
        • Rubus furvicolor
        • Rubus fuscoater
        • Rubus fuscus
        • Rubus gelertii
        • Rubus georgicus
        • Rubus glandithyrsos
        • Rubus glanduliger
        • Rubus glandulosus
        • Rubus gordonii
        • Rubus grabowskii
        • Rubus gratus
        • Rubus gremlii
        • RUbus hartmanii
        • Rubus hirtus
        • Rubus hylophilus
        • Rubus ieri
        • Rubus inermis
        • Rubus infestus
        • Rubus insularis
        • Rubus laciniatus
        • Rubus lamprophyllus
        • Rubus lespinassei
        • Rubus leucostachys
        • Rubus linkianus
        • Rubus macrophyllus
        • Rubus micans
        • Rubus miszczenkoi
        • Rubus montanus
        • Rubus moschus
        • Rubus mucronulatus
        • Rubus mulleri
        • Rubus nessensis
        • Rubus nitidoides
        • Rubus pedatifolius
        • Rubus pedemontanus
        • Rubus piceetorum
        • Rubus plicatus
        • Rubus polyanthemus
        • Rubus praecox
        • Rubus promachonicus
        • Rubus pyramidalis
        • Rubus radula
        • Rubus rhamnifolius
        • Rubus rosaceus
        • Rubus rubritinctus
        • Rubus rudis
        • Rubus sanctus
        • Rubus scheutzii
        • Rubus schlechtendalii
        • Rubus schleicheri
        • Rubus senticosus
        • Rubus separinus
        • Rubus septentrionalis
        • Rubus slesvicensis
        • Rubus sprengelii
        • Rubus sulcatus
        • Rubus thrysiflorus
        • Rubus ulmifolius
        • Rubus vestitus – European blackberry
        • Rubus vigorosus
        • Rubus vulgaris
      • Sect. Setosi (bristleberries)
        • Rubus dissensus
        • Rubus groutianus
        • Rubus junceus
        • Rubus missouricus
        • Rubus regionalis
        • Rubus semisetosus – swamp bristleberry
        • Rubus setosus
        • Rubus stipulatus
        • Rubus superioris
        • Rubus uniformis
        • Rubus vermontanus – Vermont bristleberry
        • Rubus wheeleri
        • Rubus wisconsinensis
      • Sect. Ursini (Pacific berries)
      • Sect. Verotriviales (Southern dewberries)
        • Rubus ictus
        • Rubus lucidus
        • Rubus riograndis
        • Rubus sons
        • Rubus trivialis

Hybrid berries

The term "hybrid berry" is often used collectively for those fruits in the genus Rubus which have been developed mainly in the U.S. and U.K. in the last 130 years. As Rubus species readily interbreed and are apomicts (able to set seed without fertilisation), the parentage of these plants is often highly complex, but is generally agreed to include cultivars of blackberries (R. ursinus, R. fruticosus) and raspberries (R. idaeus). The British National Collection of Rubus stands at over 200 species and, although not within the scope of the National Collection, also hold many cultivars.[18][19]

The hybrid berries include:-[20]

  • loganberry (California, U.S., 1883) R. × loganobaccus, a spontaneous hybrid between R. ursinus 'Aughinbaugh' and R. idaeus 'Red Antwerp'
  • boysenberry (U.S., 1920s) a hybrid between R. idaeus and R. × loganobaccus
  • nectarberry Suspected variant of boysenberry, a hybrid between R. idaeus and R. × loganobaccus
  • olallieberry (U.S., 1930s) a hybrid between the loganberry and youngberry, themselves both hybrid berries
  • veitchberry (Europe, 1930s) a hybrid between R. fruticosus and R. idaeus
  • skellyberry (Texas, U.S., 2000s), a hybrid between R. invisus and R. phoenicolasius
  • marionberry (1956) now thought to be a blackberry cultivar R. 'Marion'
  • silvanberry, R. 'Silvan', a hybrid between R. 'Marion' and the boysenberry
  • tayberry (Dundee, Scotland, 1979), another blackberry/raspberry hybrid
  • tummelberry, R. 'Tummel', from the same Scottish breeding programme as the tayberry
  • hildaberry (1980s), a tayberry/boysenberry hybrid discovered by an amateur grower
  • youngberry, a complex hybrid of raspberries, blackberries, and dewberries

Etymology

The generic name means blackberry in Latin and was derived from the word ruber, meaning "red".[21]

The blackberries, as well as various other Rubus species with mounding or rambling growth habits, are often called brambles. However, this name is not used for those like the raspberry that grow as upright canes, or for trailing or prostrate species, such as most dewberries, or various low-growing boreal, arctic, or alpine species. The scientific study of brambles is known as "batology". "Bramble" comes from Old English bræmbel, a variant of bræmel.[5]

See also

  • Mulberry, an unrelated deciduous tree with similar looking fruit

References

  1. "Rubus". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 2010-06-27.
  2. "Rubus L.". Tropicos. Missouri Botanical Garden. Retrieved 2010-06-27.
  3. "Rubus L." Plants of the World Online. Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2021. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  4. Brouillet, Luc (2014). "Rosaceae (subfam. Rosoideae) tribe Rubeae". In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (ed.). Flora of North America North of Mexico (FNA). Vol. 9. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press via eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA.
  5. "the definition of bramble". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 2016-02-15.
  6. Klein, Carol (2009). Grow your own fruit. United Kingdom: Mitchell Beazley. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-84533-434-5.
  7. "Rubus - Trees and Shrubs Online". www.treesandshrubsonline.org. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
  8. "Brambles and other woody weeds /RHS Gardening". www.rhs.org.uk. Retrieved 2016-02-15.
  9. "Bramble or blackberry | Woodlands.co.uk". www.woodlands.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-02-15.
  10. "Blackberry Planting, Spacing, and Trellising". Alabama Cooperative Extension System. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
  11. "Rubus all species | GDR". www.rosaceae.org. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
  12. "Small genomes in tetraploid Rubus L. (Rosaceae) from New Zealand and southern South America". www.ars.usda.gov. Retrieved 2023-09-27.
  13. Carter, Katherine A.; Liston, Aaron; Bassil, Nahla V.; Alice, Lawrence A.; Bushakra, Jill M.; Sutherland, Brittany L.; Mockler, Todd C.; Bryant, Douglas W.; Hummer, Kim E. (2019-12-20). "Target Capture Sequencing Unravels Rubus Evolution". Frontiers in Plant Science. 10: 1615. doi:10.3389/fpls.2019.01615. ISSN 1664-462X. PMC 6933950. PMID 31921259.
  14. Leopold, Estella B.; Manchester, Steven R.; Meyer, Herbert W. (2008), "Phytogeography of the late Eocene Florissant flora reconsidered", Paleontology of the Upper Eocene Florissant Formation, Colorado, Geological Society of America, doi:10.1130/2008.2435(04), ISBN 978-0-8137-2435-5, retrieved 2021-09-23
  15. Acta Palaeobotanica – 43(1): 9-49, January 2003 – Early Miocene carpological material from the Czech part of the Zittau Basin – Vasilis Teodoridis
  16. Łańcucka-Środoniowa M.: Macroscopic plant remains from the freshwater Miocene of the Nowy Sącz Basin (West Carpathians, Poland) [Szczątki makroskopowe roślin z miocenu słodkowodnego Kotliny Sądeckiej (Karpaty Zachodnie, Polska)]. Acta Palaeobotanica 1979 20 (1): 3-117.
  17. Lawrence A. Alice & Christopher S. Campbell (1999). "Phylogeny of Rubus (rosaceae) based on nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer region sequences". American Journal of Botany. 86 (1). Botanical Society of America: 81–97. doi:10.2307/2656957. JSTOR 2656957. PMID 21680348.
  18. National Collection of Rubus Species, Houghton, England, United Kingdom www.rubusspecies.com
  19. "Plant Heritage – National Collections Scheme, UK Garden Plants". nccpg.com. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  20. Ardle, John (July 2013). "Hybris vigour". The Garden.
  21. Quattrocchi, Umberto (2000). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names. Vol. IV R-Z. Taylor & Francis US. p. 2345. ISBN 978-0-8493-2678-3.
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