Sambucus racemosa
Sambucus racemosa is a species of elderberry known by the common name red elderberry. It is native to Europe, temperate Asia, and the northern half of North America. It grows in riparian environments, woodlands, and other habitat, generally in moist areas. This often treelike shrub grows 2 to 6 meters tall. The stems are soft with a pithy center. Each individual leaf is composed of 5 to 7 leaflike leaflets, each of which is up to 16 centimeters long, lance-shaped to narrowly oval, and irregularly serrated along the edges. The leaflets have a strong disagreeable odor when crushed. The inflorescence is a vaguely cone-shaped panicle of several cymes of flowers blooming from the ends of stem branches. The flower buds are pink when closed, and the open flowers are white, cream, or yellowish. Each flower has small, recurved petals and a star-shaped axis of five white stamens tipped in yellow anthers. The flowers are fragrant and visited by hummingbirds and butterflies. The fruit is a bright red or sometimes purple drupe containing 3 to 5 seeds. The fruits are popular with birds, who distribute the seeds.
Many parts of this plant are poisonous, and have been used as a traditional emetic. The fruits are reportedly safe to eat when cooked, and were savored by the Gitxsan in a variety of recipes.
Translation
The phrase "Sambucus racemosa" occurs as such in the following languages: English, French.
Translation(s) in other languages: Danish: Drue-Hyld, German: Roter Holunder, Estonian: Punane leeder, Upper Sorbian: Čerwjena bozanka, Kazakh: Қызыл ырғай, Lithuanian: Raudonuogis šeivamedis, Hungarian: Fürtös bodza, Polish: Bez koralowy, Russian: Бузина красная, Slovak: Baza červená, Finnish: Terttuselja, Swedish: Druvfläder.
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