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Mountain Snowberry
Mountain Snowberry7 locationsPlant
.: joebartels :.
Oct 26 2019
Upper Icehouse - Six Shooter via Pi
Featured Detail Photo mini map Featured Full Photo.: LosDosSloFolks :.
Oct 8 2019
Amethyst Mine via Brown's Trail
ID1335  URL
Magnoliophyta - Flowering plant
FamilyCaprifoliaceae - Honeysuckle
Elevation5500 - 9000
Prime BloomNone
BloomsMay - Aug
Images Bing, Google
Similar Species

Symphoricarpos oreophilus

North American species of flowering plant in the Caprifoliaceae, or honeysuckle family, known by the common name mountain snowberry. It has a wide distribution in western Canada, the United States, and northwestern Mexico. It is found in mountainous areas such as the Cascades, the Sierra Nevada, the Rockies, and the Sierra Madre Occidental from British Columbia to the Copper Canyon region of Chihuahua, from the coastal states as far inland as the Black Hills, the Oklahoma Panhandle, and trans-Pecos Texas.

Symphoricarpos oreophilus is a deciduous shrub growing erect or spreading or trailing. Depending on environmental conditions it may reach 30 centimetres (12 in) to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) in mature height. The fruit is a white drupe containing two nutlets, each of which contains a seed. The plant grows from a rhizome. It reproduces vegetatively by sprouting from the rhizome and by layering, and sexually via seed.

Symphoricarpos oreophilus is common in many types of habitat in western North America, and it may dominate some ecosystems, such as sagebrush. It is also an indicator species of certain habitat types where Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), white fir (Abies concolor), ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), subalpine fir (A. lasiocarpa), Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii), and/or quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) make up the overstory. It grows in all successional stages in pinyon-juniper woodlands. It is usually found in open habitat, as it does not easily tolerate shade. In heavily forested regions it grows in open areas and breaks in the canopy.

Many types of animal use this plant for food, especially in the early spring, when it is one of the first plants to bear leaves. Deer, elk, and livestock browse the foliage. Birds such as the yellow-billed magpie consume the fruits.

Source: Wikipedia
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Plants of Arizona   Pg# 249 Sonoran Desert Wildflowers   Pg# 0
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