The genus name, Arctostaphylos, derives from the Greekarctos ("bear") and staphylos ("bunch of grapes").[1] The species name, uva-ursi, is from the Latinuva, ("bunch of grapes") and ursus ("bear"), leading to the common name, "bearberry".[1]
Bearberries grow as low-lying shrubs in soils predominantly composed of sand, gravel, or dunes in the boreal forest. It is less common north of the tree line.[1]
The plant has flexible branches growing up to 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) long covered with red, shredded bark and dark green, oval leaves.[1] Flowers are white or pink, tipped with red, growing in small clusters at the ends of branches, and later maturing into red oval fruits.[1]
Species
The name "bearberry" for the plant derives in part from the edible fruit which is a food for bears.[2] The fruits are gathered as food for humans, and the leaves are used in indigenous herbal medicine.[1]
The red bearberryArctostaphylos rubra (Rehd. & Wilson) Fernald (syn. Arctous rubra (Rehder and E.H. Wilson) Nakai; Arctous alpinus var. ruber Rehd. and Wilson) is a procumbent shrub 10–30 cm high (3.9–11.8 in) with deciduous leaves. Berries are red. Its distribution is in the mountains of Sichuan, southwestern China north and east to eastern Siberia, Alaska and northern Canada, east to northern Quebec.
Uses
The berries ripen late in summer and can be eaten raw.[3]
Native American Indians traditionally made use of the plant's leaves, which they gathered in summer and dried for use as a tobacco substitute or mixed with tobacco.[4]
Folk medicine
The dried leaves can be used in teas, liquid diffusions, tea bags or tablets for traditional medicine.[5] Bearberry appears to be relatively safe, although large doses may cause nausea, vomiting, fever, chills, back pain and tinnitus.[6] Cautions for use apply during pregnancy, breast feeding, or in people with kidney disease.[5][7]
The efficacy and safety of bearberry treatment in humans remain unproven,[6] as no clinical trials exist to interpret effects on any disease.
History and folklore
Bearberry was first documented in The Physicians of Myddfai, a 13th-century Welshherbal. It was also described by Clusius in 1601, and recommended for medicinal use in 1763 by Gerhard and others. It first appeared in the London Pharmacopoeia in 1788.[citation needed]
Native Americans use bearberry leaves with tobacco and other herbs in religious ceremonies, both as a smudge (type of incense) or smoked in a sacred pipe carrying the smoker's prayers.[1] Among the ingredients in kinnikinnick were non-poisonous sumac leaves,[8] and the inner bark of certain bushes such as red osier dogwood (silky cornell),[8]chokecherry, and alder, to improve the taste of the bearberry leaf.[9]
References
^ abcdefghiBeryl Hallworth (March 4, 2015). "Bearberry". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2020-03-19.
^Janice J. Schofield (1989). Discovering wild plants: Alaska, western Canada, the Northwest. Alaska Northwest Books. p. 217. ISBN978-0-88240-355-7.
^Lyons, C. P. (1956). Trees, Shrubs and Flowers to Know in Washington (1st ed.). Canada: J. M. Dent & Sons. p. 196.
^Nordeng H. and Havnen, G.C. (2005) "Impact of socio-demographic factors, knowledge and attitude on the use of herbal drugs in pregnancy" Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica 84(1): pp. 26–33, note 16, doi:10.1111/j.0001-6349.2005.00648.x