Cloudberry - Sierra Club BC
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Cloudberry

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Cloudberry

Rubus chamaemorus 

Appearance

Cloudberry is a relative of the raspberry. It has toothed leaves, white flowers in June/July and yellow-orange berries that ripen in August/September. 

Range & Habitat

You can find cloudberries in Canada, Scandinavia, Greenland, Russia and the US. They are often found near bogs, lakes or marshes. Cloudberries can grow in both wet and dry conditions. 

Reciprocal relationships

Cloudberries are some of the most desirable, and yet elusive berries in the world. They grow in high altitudes, and cold, swampy, acidic environments. They spread especially well underground, sending out rhizomes 10 centimetres below the surface that sprout into new plants about a metre away. Moose and other herbivores graze on the twigs of cloudberry. They also produce seeds that can be carried off to colonize new areas, but this is less common. 

The tasty berries are frozen and eaten throughout the winter. Inuit peoples make an ice cream-like dish by beating the frozen berries with seal oil and caribou tallow. Additionally, cloudberry leaves are combined with bearberry, and alpine smartweed to make tea used to alleviate stomachaches. 

status

COSEWIC: Not Reported 
CDC: Yellow 

More information

If you belong to a First Nation with a story or piece of information not represented here and you would like to share more about this species, please email us at education@sierraclub.bc.ca.   

photo credit

Canva

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