Rubus nessensis

W. Hall

RosaceaeFruitLeavesSpice/Beverage
⚠ Dangerous Lookalikes — Has a deadly poisonous lookalike — see comparison below
Rubus nessensis
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) Сергей Петров, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)
Rubus nessensis
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) Сергей Петров, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)
Rubus nessensis
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) Сергей Петров, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

What to Eat

Edible parts: Fruit, Leaves - tea

The fruit can be eaten raw or cooked. It is agreeably acid with the character of a blackberry but the flavour of a raspberry.

Dangerous Lookalikes

This plant can be confused with the following toxic species. Always verify identification carefully before consuming any wild plant.

DEADLY
Red Baneberry
Red Baneberry
Actaea rubra
SAFE
Rubus nessensis
Rubus nessensis
Rubus nessensis
Actaea rubra
Actaea rubra
Rubus nessensis
Rubus nessensis

Red Baneberry: Short herbaceous plant (no thorns), berries on thick red stems, each berry has a single seed, compound sharply-toothed leaves.

Rubus nessensis: Thorny woody canes (brambles), aggregate berry made of many drupelets, berries pull easily from receptacle.

Where to Find It

It is a temperate plant.

Britain, Europe, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Russia, Scandinavia,

Countries: Andorra, Albania, Austria, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Belgium, Bulgaria, Belarus, Switzerland, Cyprus, Czechia, Germany, Denmark, Estonia, Spain, Finland, France, United Kingdom, Greece, Croatia, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Monaco, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Russia, Sweden, Slovenia, Slovakia, San Marino, Ukraine

How to Identify

A deciduous shrub growing to 3 m tall. Flowers appear May to July. Hermaphroditic flowers are insect-pollinated; reproduces apomictically via seeds formed without sexual fusion. Adapts to light sandy, medium loamy, or heavy clay soils with good drainage, including very acidic soils. Tolerates mildly acidic to mildly alkaline pH. Grows in semi-shade or full sun and prefers moist soil.

How to Grow

Easily grown in a good well-drained loamy soil in sun or semi-shade. Succeeds on very acid soils. The plant produces apomictic flowers, these produce fruit and viable seed without fertilization, each seedling is a genetic copy of the parent. Plants in this genus are notably susceptible to honey fungus.

Propagation: Seed requires stratification and is best sown in early autumn in a cold frame. Stored seed needs one month of stratification at around 3°c and should be sown as early in the year as possible. Prick out seedlings once large enough to handle and grow on in a cold frame, then plant out into permanent positions in late spring of the following year. Cuttings of half-ripe wood can be taken in July or August in a frame. Tip layer in July and plant out in autumn. Divide in early spring or just before leaf-fall in autumn.

Medicinal Uses

None known

Other Uses

A purple to dull blue dye can be obtained from the fruit.

Wikipedia

Source ↗

Rubus nessensis is a species of bramble native to Northwestern Europe, including Great Britain and Ireland. Two subspecies are recognized: R. n. nessensis and R. n. cubirianus.

Notes

There are about 250 Rubus species.

Names & Synonyms

Ezhevink, Kazene, Kumanika

Rubus suberectus (Sm.) Weihe
References (6)
  • Hedrick, U.P., 1919, (Ed.), Sturtevant's edible plants of the world. p 578
  • Kolosova, V., et al, 2020, Foraging in Boreal Forest: Wild Food Plants of the Republic of Karelia, NW Russia. Foods 2020, 9, 1015; p 20
  • Łukasz Łuczaj and Wojciech M Szymański, 2007, Wild vascular plants gathered for consumption in the Polish countryside: a review. J Ethnobiol Ethnomedicine. 3: 17
  • Plants for a Future database, The Field, Penpol, Lostwithiel, Cornwall, PL22 0NG, UK. http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/pfaf/
  • Pruse, B., et al, 2021, Active Wild Food Practices among Culturally Diverse Groups in the 21st Century across Latgale, Latvia. Biology 2021, 10, 551.
  • Trans. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh 3:20. 1794

More from Rosaceae