Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 8, No. 3, September 1935
Some Fruits of Crater Lake
Plants
By Elmer I. Applegate, Ranger-Naturalist
No less interesting than the flowers
are the fruits of some of the plants of Crater Lake National Park. These
include not only fleshy fruits, but seed-pods, capsules, grains and the
like. Fruit in a botanical sense is any seed vessel with its contents,
including any accessories that may be joined to it. In the present
account, however, only the fleshy fruits are considered, which, as far
as our area is concerned, means only berries or berry-like fruits.
Twenty-one genera with thirty-five
species are included in the list. Of the number that are edible, some
are so small and produced in such limited quantities that they are of no
practical food value. Of those of any such use, might be mentioned two
huckleberries, one each of honeysuckle, blackberry, raspberry,
strawberry, thimbleberry, serviceberry, gooseberry and Oregon grape --
nine berries in all, included in only five genera. None of these are
found in abundance, so that the fruit value of the park is almost
negligible as far as human consumption is concerned. In addition to
these, some are highly ornamental in fruit, adding much to the floral
beauty of the park.
Four huckleberries (Vaccinium)
occur. The Big Huckleberry
(V. membranaceum) is a rather tall shrub with large amber or
brownish berries, turning black late in the season, found in the upper
forests and thriving best on northerly slopes, especially near streams.
It is the most productive of all the species of the genus in the
southern Cascades, and much used by both white people and Indians; known
by the Klamaths as ewaum, and the name Ewaumcan was given
by them to the big huckleberry patch southwest of the park. More
abundant in dryer situations and in middle elevations, is the broom or
Leiberg huckleberry (V. scoparium), especially in the lodgepole
pine forests. The bushes are low with angular stems and small leaves,
and very small red fruit of pleasant acid flavor. It is widely
distributed from the coast mountains to the Rockies. The species was
named by Leiberg from specimens collected by him at Crater Lake in 1896.
Dwarf Huckleberry (V. caespitosum) resembles most the larger
species, but is low and usually matted, with smaller dark blue, more
glaucus berries, and usually found in the upper forests and often on the
highest ledges. In wet meadows and bogs, especially along the water
courses of the west slope, are found dense colonies of Swamp Huckleberry
(V. occidentale). The bushes are two feet high or less with
leaves of a grayish cast and longish blue-black berries covered with a
dense bloom. The fruit is of medium size and fine flavor, but not
prolific.
Three erect bush-form species of
honeysuckle (Lonicera) are to be found. Of these Black Twin-berry
(L. involucrata) is rather widely distributed , but most frequently
along streams and borders of wet meadows. The pairs of yellow flowers
and elongated black berries are subtended by large reddish bracts which
give the plant a striking appearance. With about the same habitats and
distribution, Red Twinberry
(L. conjugialis) has smaller and nearly black flowers and bright
red berries which are almost completely united into a double fruit.
Swamp Honeysuckle (L. utahensis) grows only in wet or boggy
places. The flowers are pure white, turning yellowish later, growing in
pairs among the grayish-green leaves. The pleasantly acid red fruit was
sometimes used by the early settlers in Wood River Valley, and called by
them "cranberry". The species is rare in the park, occurring sparingly
at Boundary Springs perhaps other similar places.

Six species of gooseberry and currant
contribute to the small-fruit list. The most noteworthy of these is the
Crater Lake Currant (Ribes orythrocarpum), the most abundant
shrub of the upper forests, its creeping stems forming a fine carpet for
the forest floor. The flowers are saucer-shaped and of a copper-color.
The clusters of bright red berries are very attractive. The species was
named by Dr. F. V. Colville in 1896. Although so abundant in the park,
it is not found far without its boundaries. None of the species here are
edible except R. inerme,
the fine gooseberry found along streams in the yellow pine belt. It most
resembles the common cultivated form, the wine-colored fruit very
similar in size and flavor, often used in pioneer days for sauce and
pies. Sticky Currant (R. viscossimum) has large blue gummy
berries with a bloom; and the Waxy Currant (R. cereum) bright red
berries. Both forms have long tubular flowers. The Spiney Currant (R.
lacustre) is common along the water courses and covers moist banks.
The black berries are relatively small. Trailing in the hemlock forests,
is occasionally seen the Siskiyou Gooseberry (R. binominatum),
the berries covered with stout yellow spines.
Bitter Cherry (Prunus emarginata)
is plentiful in the yellow pine woods, and extends into the upper levels
where it is often seen on rocky ledges. The small bright red drupaceous
fruit is intensely bitter.
Serviceberry (Amelanchier). The
species is not well defined. This is sometimes identified as florida.
The tall, much branched shrub is covered with snowy white flowers. The
berries are dark purple, almost black. It is most common in the yellow
pine woods, although rather plentiful on ledgy northerly slopes higher
up. Lacking acidity, the fruit is somewhat insipid.
Oregon Grape (Mahonia nervosa)
is found in the forest areas well down toward the western boundary,
especially about the headwaters of Redblanket Creek. The simple stem
bears a tuft of long pinnate leaves with numerous holly-like leaflets.
The blue-glaucus berries grow in an erect elongated cluster, and are
very acid.
Mostly along streams and margins of wet
meadows, in lower and middle elevations, occurs the Virginia Strawberry
(Fragaria virginiana).
The fruit is delicious but not plentiful in many places in the park.
Cascara (Rhamnus purshiana) is a
tall shrub with rather large elliptical leaves and very small greenish
flowers. The berries are black with one or two large flattish seeds, and
a very bitter taste. The bark is used medicinally. Only occasionally
seen on ledgy slopes. Sometimes found on the inner talus slopes as at
the Devil's Backbone.
Two Gaultherias, ovatifolia,
and humifusa, small creeping evergreen shrubs belonging to the
heath family, occur along streams and about wet meadows toward the
western boundary. The small red berries have a very pleasant acid taste.
Another pair of shrubs belonging to the same family, are the manzanitas.
They are evergreen also, and have crooked branches with smooth and
polished bark. The flowers are pinkish with urn-shaped corollas, the
fruit berry-like, stony, and pulp becoming mealy and dry. Abundant in
the lower forest areas, is the higher upright green-leaved species (Arctostaphylos
patula), which is replaced in the upper reaches by the low
mat-forming (A. nevadensis).
An herbaceous plant of moist shady
places it the Baneberry, (Actaea spicata arguta). Its large
leaves are deeply cut into many leaflets. The showy red berries are
borne on an erect elongated raceme.
Dwarf Juniper (Juniperus sibirica).
This low, usually prostrate shrub, closely related to the cone-bearing
trees, is rare in the park, occurring only on the highest points. The
fruit is a small modified cone, berry-like, globose, blue and covered
with white bloom.
Frequently seen in the moist places
under coniferous trees, is Bride's Bonnet (Clintonia uniflora).
The single white liliaceous flower is borne on a stype-like stem arising
from two or three basil leaves. The berry is blue.
The two species of Solomon's Seal (Smilacona),
stellata
with nearly black berries, and amplexicaulis which has light red
fruit covered with dark red specks, are common in many places in the
park.
Resembling the last in foliage, Twisted
Stalk (Streptopus curvipes)
grows in moist forest stream banks. The red ovoid berries are borne on
the underside of the pinnate leaves.
Rare in the region, and known only
along streams of the western border, is the dwarf dogwood or Bunchberry
(Cornus canadensis).
Less than a foot high, it has flowers with large white bracts like the
large Nuttall Dogwood. The bright red berries form a dense globular
bunch.
The red-fruited elder (Sambucus
racemosa callicarpa), fine in flower, in fruit is perhaps the most
attractive shrub in the park. The large dense and finely rounded clumps
with deep green foliage and elongated bunches of red berries, is common
over considerable areas of the upper reaches. Nowhere does it show to
better advantage than on Wizard Island. As seen from a boat along the
shore, it attracts much attention, standing out most conspicuously
against the black lava background. This Crater Lake elder was named by
Leiberg, S. leiosperma, the species being based upon seed
characters which do not seem of sufficient value to entitle it to the
name.
Another very showy-fruited shrub, often
associated with the last is the Sitka Mountain Ash (Sorbus sitchensis).
Morphologically, the fruit is essentially the same as a very diminutive
apple, being not more than a quarter of an inch in diameter. The red
berries are borne in large dense umbel-like clusters quite different
from the apple, and the leaves are pinnately compound with numerous
serrate leaflets, still further differentiating the plant from its close
relative. The many tall stems form large clumps, and are a familiar
sight in much of the forested areas. The autumn foliage is also very
attractive, especially noticeable along streams on the inner talus
slopes.
