chokecherry

(Prunus virginiana var. virginiana)

Conservation Status
chokecherry
 
  IUCN Red List

not listed

     
  NatureServe

N5 - Secure

SNR - Unranked

     
  Minnesota

not listed

     
           
Wetland Indicator Status
     
  Great Plains

FACU - Facultative upland

     
  Midwest

FACU - Facultative upland

     
  Northcentral & Northeast

FACU - Facultative upland

     
           
 
Description
 
 

Chokecherry is a deciduous, relatively slow-growing, short lived, 8 to 25 tall, up to 6 in diameter woody plant that rises from a network of shallow, to ½ in diameter rhizomes. It is usually a tall shrub with multiple stems, though on favorable sites it may be a small tree with a single trunk. It is short-lived and relatively slow growing. Roots occur at intervals along the rhizomes and may extend vertically 6 or more. The root system extends horizontally 35 or more. The plant often forms colonies (thickets) by producing aerial stems from buds on the spreading roots (suckering).

The stems are slender, erect to slightly spreading, often leaning, often crooked, and often twisted. They are often branched near the base. The branches are slender and upright to slightly spreading

The bark on young stems is smooth and dark grayish-brown. It is covered with numerous, pale, horizontal lines (lenticels). As it ages it becomes darker and rough; the outer layers develop tight, curled peeling edges; and the lenticels become shallow fissures.

Twigs are slender to moderately stout, hairless, and brown to grayish-brown or reddish-brown, soon becoming dark reddish-brown. They do not have an outer grayish skin that wears off. When scratched the twigs have a bitter almond odor and taste.

Buds are reddish-brown, sharply pointed, and small, only about long. They are held slightly away from the twig. They are covered with about 10 scales. The scales are pointed, dark brown at the base, and gray at the margins. The leaf scars are small, raised, and semi-circular. They have 3 bundle scars. The pith is solid.

The leaves are alternate, broadly elliptic or inversely egg-shaped, 2¼ to 4long, and 1¼ to 2 wide. They are 1.4 to 2 times as long as wide. They are attached to the twig on to ¾ long leaf stalks (petioles). The petiole is usually hairless and has 1 or a few stalkless glands near the point where the blade attaches to the stalk. The blade is rounded at the base and tapers to a short point at the tip with concave sides along the tip. The upper surface is dark green and hairless. The lower surface is pale green with whitish or yellowish hairs mostly on the axils of the lateral veins. The margins are finely, singly toothed. The teeth are short and straight. They are not tipped with a minute, hard, gland-like thickening. The leaves turn yellow in autumn.

The inflorescence is a dense, elongated, unbranched cluster (raceme) of 20 to 50 flowers at the end of short, leafy shoots of the current season. The racemes are cylinder shaped, 2 to 4 long, and about ¾wide. Each flower is on a hairless, to 5 16 long stalk.

The flowers are to ½ in diameter. They open in early May to mid-June before the leaves reach full size. There are 5 sepals, 5 petals, about stamens, and 1 style. The sepals are green and 1 64 to 1 16 long. They have 10 or more minute, red glands or glandular teeth on the margin. The petals are white, to 316 long, and conspicuously narrowed at the base (clawed). The claw is about 1 32 long. The expanded portion of the petal is circular, cupped, and about wide. The stamens have long, translucent green filaments and yellow anthers.

The fruit is a fleshy, one-seeded, spherical or inversely egg-shaped, 5 16to 7 16 in diameter drupe. It is green at first, red later in the season, and finally dark reddish-purple to blackish when it matures in mid-July to late August. The sepals do not persist in fruit. The ripe fruit is very astringent but edible when ripe.

 
     
 

Height

 
 

8 to 25

 
     
 

Flower Color

 
 

White

 
     
 

Similar Species

 
  Black cherry (Prunus serotina var. serotina) is a tree with a single trunk. The bud scales are green at the base and reddish-brown at the tip. The leaves are narrower, 2 to 3 times as long as wide. The lower leaf surface is hairless except for a narrow patch of rust-colored hairs along both sides of the midvein on the lower ½ or of the blade. The teeth on the margins are curved inward. They have a gland-like thickening at the tip. The sepals persist in fruit.  
     
 
Habitat
 
 

Forest edges and openings; interiors or forests with thin to moderate canopies; thickets; old fields; and roadsides. Full to partial sun.

 
     
 
Ecology
 
 

Flowering

 
 

Early May to mid-June

 
     
 

Pests and Diseases

 
 

Cherry Leaf Spot (Blumeriella jaapii) causes small purple spots on the leaves. Later, the spots turn brown, separate from the green tissue, and drop off, leaving a “shot hole”. Eventually, the infected leaf turns yellows and falls off.

Chokecherry finger gall mite (Eriophyes emarginatae) causes a small, narrow, erect, finger-like gall on the upper side of leaves. When present, there are usually many galls on each infected leaf.

 
     
 
Use
 
 

 

 
     
 
Distribution
 
 

Distribution Map

 

Sources

2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 24, 28, 29, 30.

 
  3/23/2023      
         
 

Nativity

 
 

Native

 
         
 

Occurrence

 
 

Common and widespread

 
         
 
Taxonomy
 
  Kingdom Plantae (green algae and land plants)  
  Subkingdom Viridiplantae (green plants)  
  Infrakingdom Streptophyta (land plants and green algae)  
  Superdivision Embryophyta (land plants)  
  Division Tracheophyta (vascular plants)  
  Subdivision Spermatophytina (seed plants)  
  Class Magnoliopsida (flowering plants)  
  Superorder Rosanae  
 

Order

Rosales (roses, elms, figs, and allies)  
 

Family

Rosaceae (rose)  
  Subfamily Amygdaloideae  
  Tribe Amygdaleae  
 

Genus

Prunus (plums, cherries, and allies)  
  Subgenus Padus  
  Species chokecherry (Prunus virginiana)  
       
 

Subordinate Taxa

 
 

 

 
       
 

Synonyms

 
 

Padus nana

Padus virginiana

 
       
 

Common Names

 
 

choke cherry

chokecherry

common chokecherry

eastern choke cherry

Virginia chokecherry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glossary

Axil

The upper angle where a branch, stem, leaf stalk, or vein diverges.

 

Claw

A stalk-like narrowed base of some petals and sepals.

 

Drupe

A fleshy fruit with a single hard, stone-like core, like a cherry or peach.

 

Filament

On plants: The thread-like stalk of a stamen which supports the anther. On Lepidoptera: One of a pair of long, thin, fleshy extensions extending from the thorax, and sometimes also from the abdomen, of a caterpillar.

 

Lenticel

A corky, round or stripe-like, usually raised, pore-like opening in bark that allows for gas exchange.

 

Petiole

On plants: The stalk of a leaf blade or a compound leaf that attaches it to the stem. On ants and wasps: The constricted first one or two segments of the rear part of the body.

 

Pith

The spongy cells in the center of the stem.

 

Raceme

An unbranched, elongated inflorescence with stalked flowers. The flowers mature from the bottom up.

 

Rhizome

A horizontal, usually underground stem. It serves as a reproductive structure, producing roots below and shoots above at the nodes.

 

Sepal

An outer floral leaf, usually green but sometimes colored, at the base of a flower.

 

Sucker

A basal shoot rising from the roots or from a bud at the base of a shrub or tree.

 
 
Visitor Photos
 
           
 

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Luciearl

 
 

Found this growing on the shore in my buffer.

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
 

Bill Reynolds

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
           
 
MinnesotaSeasons.com Photos
 
 

Plant

 
    chokecherry      
           
 

Inflorescence

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
           
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
           
 

Leaves

 
    chokecherry      
           
 

Leaf

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
           
 

Fruit

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  
           
 

Young Bark

 
    chokecherry   chokecherry  

 

Camera

     
 
Slideshows
 
  Prunus virginiana
Matt Lavin
 
  Prunus virginiana  
 
About

Fruit: drupe. Prunus is the only genus with a single ovary per flower that develops into a drupe. Shrubs to small trees, up to 6m tall, usually riparian and site with high water table, common throughout Montana and sometime entering open understory, sagebrush steppe, and rangeland near riparian areas.

 
  Chokecherry
DianesDigitals
 
  Chokecherry  
 
About

Copyright DianesDigitals

 
  Chokecherry (Wild Cherry) (Prunus virginiana)
Andree Reno Sanborn
 
  Chokecherry (Wild Cherry) (Prunus virginiana)  

 

slideshow

       
 
Visitor Videos
 
       
 

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Other Videos
 
  Honey Bees (Apis mellifera) and Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana), Montana, USA
Rob Mutch
 
   
 
About

Uploaded on Jan 8, 2012

Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apis_mellifera

Encyclopedia of Life (EOL): http://eol.org/pages/3787799/overview

[taxonomy:binomial=Apis mellifera]

   
  Chokecherry Blossoms (Prunus virginiana)
Wandering Sole TV
 
   
 
About

Published on Jul 5, 2012

Chokecherry shrubs in flower.

   
  Wild edibles, ChokeCherry tree Identification.
JoeandZachSurvival
 
   
 
About

Uploaded on Jun 2, 2011

The Chokecherry tree can be a big tree, the berries while tart and mouth numbing, they ere edible, a bit sour, but they make great jellies and jams.

Here is a springtime view of the tree as a cross reference for anyone interested. Thank You.

   

 

Camcorder

 
 
Visitor Sightings
 
           
 

Report a sighting of this plant.

 
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  Luciearl
May 2023

Location: Cass County

chokecherry  
  Bill Reynolds
8/7/2016

Location: Numedal Township, Pennington Co., Minnesota

chokecherry  
  Olga Zenteno
8/8/2015

Location: Scenic State Park

chokecherries ripe all over the park- alongside lakes and on trails as well.

 
           
 
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