Plantae>Magnoliophyta>Magnoliopsida>Ericales>Ericaceae>Vaccinium formosum H.C. Andrews
| This medium-sized deciduous shrub is common in moist areas of the Coastal Plain of North Carolina. Confusingly similar to other highbush blueberries formerly lumped in V. corymbosum, the leaves are fairly long (4-10 cm), tend to be broadest below the middle, do not have ciliate margins, and lack stipitate glands beneath. The leaves of the very similar V. caesariense (New Jersey Highbush Blueberry), rare in Coastal Plain bogs and swamps, are 3-6 cm long and tend to be broader at or above the middle. Also compare with Vaccinium corymbosum (Smooth Highbush Blueberry) of the Mountains. Robeson Co., NC 5/29/08. |
| Young twigs are hairless. Leaf margins are eciliate. Bud scales tend to turn reddish and average slightly longer than those of V. caesariense and V. corymbosum (2-4 mm vs. 1-3 mm). Robeson Co., NC 5/29/08. |
| The berries are large and blue, with a glaucous bloom. This is one of the main blueberry species in cultivation. Robeson Co., NC 5/29/08. |
| Bark detail. Robeson Co., NC 5/29/08. |
More information:
Floridata
Louisiana Ecosystems & Plant Identification
USDA PLANTS database
Virginia Tech Dendrology
Revised 6/1/08 cwcook@duke.edu
All photographs and text ©2008 by Will Cook