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| Introduction           Most
  developments and improvements in fruits have been a result of selection and
  hybridization, but there are sill many wild fruits used worldwide.  In America wild fruits were first
  cultivated after the European colonization. 
  Of especial interest is that many of the fruits grown in modern times
  had their origin in the same part of Asia of the earliest civilizations.  This is for the most part true of the rose
  family that includes a large number of our most popular fruits:  apple, cherry, plum, pear, apricot,
  raspberry, blackberry and strawberry. 
  Plums and apples still exist in the wild state in the mountains of
  Western and Central Asia.             Concentrations of fruit plants
  gathered in the Mediterranean region where the climate proved ideal for
  growing them.  There they were
  improved and perfected.  The
  Egyptians, Greeks and Romans knew many varieties.  The Dark Ages did not extinguish the knowledge and experience
  that had been gained in ancient times.  
  The early colonists brought fruit seeds and plants to America and
  these have spread over the continent. 
  Commercial fruit growing then became increasing important,
  particularly on the Pacific Coast. 
  Today California, Washington and Oregon include one of the largest
  fruit-producing areas of the world.             In temperate climates fruits are
  considered more as an agreeable addition to the diet than as a staple
  food.  However, in tropical areas fruits
  may often be the main, and even the only, source of food.  Crops such as banana, plantain, date, fig,
  coconut and breadfruit are staples. 
  Temperate zone fruits have only a slight nutritive value.  The water content is around 80 percent and
  the rest of the fruit is made up of cellulose, with some roughage value, and
  a solution of sugars, starches, pectin and organic acids that are flavored
  with essential oils and aromatic ethers. 
  Carbohydrates are the most abundant, the exact quantity and kind of
  sugar being determined by the stage of ripeness.  Fats and proteins are negligible.  However, organic acids are present in larger amounts than in
  any other plant products.  These are
  mainly malic, citric and tartaric acids. 
  The different pectin compounds are important for they have the
  property of forming a jelly under the right conditions.  Mineral salts are also present in sizeable
  quantities.               Many ways
  have been devised to preserve perishable fruits.  Included are salting, drying and smoking; sweeting with honey,
  sugar and spices; preserving in alcohol or other chemicals; pickling in
  vinegar; packing in fats; sterilization; canning and freezing.  Drying, canning and freezing are the most
  important.             Drying preserves fruit because
  bacteria fail to develop when the water content is below 25 percent.  Sun and hot air are used in this
  process.  Some fruits are cooked with
  sugar before drying.  In canning a
  strong solution of honey, sugar or glucose keeps out agents of decomposition
  and thus great quantities of fruit are preserved as jellies, jams, marmalades
  and candied fruits.  The cold pack or
  quick-freezing method is very effective. 
  In this case the fruit is placed in small containers and the heat is
  extracted rapidly from both the top and the bottom of the container.  This produces smaller ice crystals as the
  material freezes and gives a superior color, quality, flavor and vitamin
  content to the product. 
  Quick-freezing is practicable for commercial or home use.  Although it has been used since the first
  of the 20th Century, it became of greater importance by the end of that
  century.  This is coincident with the
  development of improved cold-storage methods and greater ease of transportation.  By the 21st Century the production of
  fresh fruit had become an important worldwide industry and it is possible to
  receive fresh fruit from all parts of the world from a supply that is
  virtually unlimited.               This is a variable procedure.  Technically a fruit is the seed-bearing
  portion of the plant that consists of the ripened ovary and its
  contents.  Usually the ovary alone is
  involved in the formation of the fruit, but in the accessory fruits other
  structures, such as the calyx and receptacle are involved.  Simple fruits are derived from a single
  ovary, and compound fruits from more than one.  In the latter the aggregate fruits are formed from numerous
  ovaries of the same flower, while multiple fruits come from the ovaries of
  different flowers.  They may be either
  dry or fleshy.  Thus, grains, legumes
  and nuts and some vegetables may come under the definition of fruits.  However, in this section only those fruits
  that are usually consumed without cooking are considered.  It is convenient to divide those fruits of
  temperate regions from those of the tropics and subtropics, which will be
  treated in the next section: Fruits of Tropical & Subtropical Regions   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  - - - - - - -               Pome fruits are simile accessory
  fruits where the ovary is surrounded by a fleshy outer portion derived from
  the same other part of the flower. 
  There is some disagreement as to the morphological nature of this
  edible portion.  Sometimes it is
  considered to be a fleshy calyx, but more often it is an enlarged
  receptacle.  In both cases the ripened
  ovary forms only the core.  In most of
  the pomaceous fruits the flesh surrounds the carpels entirely, but in the
  medlar the carpels are exposed at the top. 
  Even though the word “pome” is restricted to this type of fruit, Pomology retains its original Latin significance and refers
  to the whole subject and practice of fruit growing (Hill 1952).               Apples, Pyrus malus, are in first place
  among fruits of temperate regions The tree is indigenous in Eastern Europe
  and Western Asia and has been grown for over 3,100 years.  Apple seeds have been detected in the
  remains of the Lake Dwellers of Switzerland. 
  The Romans knew over 22 kinds and nowadays there are perhaps 7,000
  horticultural forms.  This great
  number may be due partly to the ease of hybridization and their great
  variability.             The apple
  tree is low, round-crowned and rarely exceeds 20 ft in height.  It may attain an age of 100 years.  The wood is hard and dense and is used for
  tool handles and firewood.  The pink
  and white flowers and the leaves are borne together, usually at the ends of
  short twigs, known as spurs.  Apples
  grow well in many different kinds of soils and climates.  The best yield is obtained where the soil
  contains a slight amount of lime. 
  Apple trees are hardy and can be grown as far north as 65 deg. North
  latitude, they are subject to frost injury. 
  There are only a few varieties that will grow in the tropics and these
  are usually placed at higher elevations. 
  The principal apple producing regions are North America, Europe,
  Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.             European varieties of apple ere
  brought to America when it was found that the native species had little
  value.  By 1750 there were many
  well-established orchards.  Apples can
  be grown from seed, but propagation is usually by budding or grafting.  Summer, autumn and winter varieties are
  developed.  They are picked when fully
  ripe in order to allow for all the necessary chemical changes to take place
  during ripening.  This involves an
  increase in the amount of sugar and a corresponding decrease in starch and
  acidity.             Apples have exceptional storage
  qualities.  They are often dried as
  well as eaten raw and cooked.  A
  considerable amount is canned, usually as applesauce.  The juice is converted into cider and
  vinegar.  The sugar in fresh apple
  juice is readily changed into alcohol by the action of wild yeasts.  When the alcoholic content is a maximum,
  hard cider is the result.  Later
  acetic acid bacteria convert the alcohol into acetic acid or vinegar.  Applejack is an alcoholic beverage made
  from cider.  Other by-products include
  apple concentrate, apple powder, apple pumice and apple syrup, the last is
  used in bread, cigarettes and smoking tobacco to maintain the proper moisture
  content.             Crab Apples produce
  a small yellow or reddish fruit about one inch in diameter.  There are several American species, but their
  fruits are of little value.  They are
  grown primarily for their attractive flowers.  Crab apple cultivars are usually hybrids between the common
  apple and the Siberian crab apple, Pyrus baccata.  Many oriental species have been introduced
  for ornamental purposes and are grown for their beautiful flowers.               Pears are
  widely used as table fruits and great quantities are canned.  A beverage, Perry,
  similar to cider is made from the juice. 
  In North America, California, Oregon, Washington and New York are the
  leading producers.  There is a large
  export trade with Europe.               Pyrus communis is indigenous to
  Eurasia and was known since ancient times. 
  It resembles apple but is a bit longer and more upright.  The flowers are generally white and are
  formed with the leaves.  The typical
  pyriform fruit has a persistent calyx. 
  Common pear is sweeter and juicier than apple, and the flesh contains
  numerous grit or Stone Cells, a specialized type of
  cell with very thick walls.  Pears are
  not as hardy and have a more restricted rang than apples.  They do best in heavy soils with
  considerable humus and good drainage and regions with a more equable climate,
  especially near large bodies of water. 
  They propagate from seed or by grafting.  Pears are widely grown in Europe where over 5,000 varieties are
  known.  France is the leading
  producer.  The United States produces
  about 25 percent of the world crop with Argentina, South Africa, Australia
  and New Zealand also having significant acreage.  Pears are harvested before they are entirely ripe.               Chinese pear, also known as Sand Pear, Pyrus pyrifolia var. culta, is the source of many
  of the varieties grown in North America for cooking purposes and
  storage.  This Chinese native produces
  flowers just before the leaves.  The
  large fruit has a deciduous calyx and a very gritty, hard flesh with
  excellent storage qualities.  It is
  frequently used in hybrids and grafting with the common pear.                Medlar, Mespilus germanica, is a small tree with
  branches that spread at right angles. 
  It is indigenous to Europe were several varieties are cultivated.  The fruit is brown and apple-shaped with a
  harsh flesh and acid flavor.  It is
  used more for jellies and jams rather than eaten fresh.               Quince, Cydonia oblonga, was cultivated in
  ancient times.  It was highly prized
  by the Romans.  It is indigenous to
  Western Asia from Iran to Turkestan and may still be found in the wild.  There have been very little changes made
  to the cultivated plant.  It is a
  small tree of 15-20 feet in height with many crooked branches.  The large fruit is round or pear-shaped.  The leaves are densely tomentose beneath
  and the fruit is wooly when young. 
  The golden flesh is hard and quite unpalatable.  The seeds have a mucilaginous covering and
  are of value in medicine.  The fruit
  is usually used for jelly and marmalade, often mixed with pears and
  apples.  It is also canned.   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  - - - - - - -               These are drupes with fleshy
  fruits and a single seed enclosed in the hard inner portion of the ripened
  ovary wall.  Three sections in the
  fruit are:  the outer skin or epicarp,
  the fleshy edible mesocarp and the stone or endocarp that contains the
  seed.  Most of the drupes of temperate
  regions belong to the genus Prunus. 
  They are all trees and shrubs that often exude a natural gum.  The bark, leaves and seeds contain a
  glucoside, Amygdalin that is readily converted to prussic acid and may cause
  poisoning.               Apricot, Prunus armeniaca, is native to Asia
  where it still grows in the wild state. 
  It was cultivated in China as early as 2,000 B.C. and soon reached
  India, Egypt, Persia and Armenia.  It
  was introduced into Europe in the First Century.  This is a small tree 20-30 ft. in height with pink flowers
  produced before the leaves.  The fruit
  is peach like in color and shape and is velvety when young with a
  yellowish-orange flesh.  The stone is
  smooth and flattened.  The apricot is
  susceptible to frost and is grown only in warmer temperate climates,
  principally in China, Japan, Turkey, Northern Africa and warmer parts of
  North America.  It does not respond
  well to pruning.  Apricots are eaten
  fresh or as dried, frozen, canned, candied and when made into a paste.  A substitute for almond oil is extracted
  from the seeds.               Cherries are
  trees with birch like bark, white or pinkish flowers that are produced in
  clusters, and small, smooth, long-stemmed fruits with a round smooth
  stone.  They are indigenous to Eurasia
  and were cultivated in ancient times. 
  There are over 1,200 varieties that have been in cultivation and these
  belong to two distinct species.  The
  fruits of the native American cherries are of little commercial value.             Cherries are
  mused as table fruits, in pies, for glacé fruits and in canning.  In the last case they are often bleached
  in fumes of sulfur and treated with brine and sodium sulfite to harden the
  flesh.  Cherry brandy and marashino
  are distilled from cherry juice.  The
  juice is also used for cherry cider, jelly and syrup.  A fixed oil is obtained from fresh seeds.             Cherries are
  extensively grown in temperate regions and are especially important in
  Europe.  Several species of Japanese Flowering Cherry, mainly Prunus
  serrulata, are cultivated for ornamental purposes.               Prunus avium is a tall long-lived
  tree with yellow or greenish fruit. 
  It has a restricted range in North America and is grown only in areas
  with an equable climate, such as New York, the Lake States and the Pacific
  Coast.  There are over 600 varieties
  in cultivation.  They are used mainly
  for their fresh fruit.               Prunus cerasus is a smaller tree with
  a heavy wood and red fruits.  The main
  growing areas in North America are New York, Wisconsin and Michigan.  They are used primarily for canning
  purposes and freezing.  Over 300
  varieties are grown.  They do not
  survive in warmer winter climates are prone to plant "virus-like"
  infections                Peach, Prunus persica, is of great
  importance in North America.  The tree
  is indigenous to China where it has been cultivated for thousands of
  years.  Many varieties have been
  developed there and legends have been associated with the fruit.  The peach reached the Mediterranean region
  very early in history and the Romans grew at least six varieties.  It reached North America with the earliest
  colonists.  It is now cultivated in
  most temperate climates of the world, especially in Southern Europe, The
  United States, South Africa, Japan and Australia.  There are over 3,000 varieties grown, few of which reach commercial
  status.             The tree is low, rather
  short-lived and susceptible to frost injury and low temperatures.  The attractive pink flowers are produced
  before the leaves.  The round fruits
  have a velvety skin and a compressed, pitted or furrowed stone.  The plant does best in a sandy soil.  Commercial orchards are usually near large
  bodies of water.             Peaches are eaten fresh or
  canned.  A considerable quantity is
  also dried or frozen.  Fixed and
  volatile oils, similar to almond oils, are obtained from the seeds.  Peach stone charcoal ahs been used as a
  filter for gas masks.               Prunus persica var.
  nectarina
  is a
  variety of peach.  It has a smooth
  skin and is somewhat smaller.  The
  principal growing areas are California and Texas.               Plums are
  small trees or shrubs with white flowers and large, smooth, clustered fruits
  with a bloom.  The smooth stones are
  flattened.  Commercial plums in North
  America are derived from three main sources: 
  European plums, native America species and Japanese species.  There is a great diversity in climatic
  requirements among the three.  Plums
  are used in a variety of ways, such as fresh fruit, canning, cooking and
  jams.  They are picked when mature but
  not completely ripe if they are to be eaten fresh.  For canning and jams they are allowed to ripen longer and for
  prunes they are fully ripe. 
  California and Michigan have led the production in North America.               Prunus domestica is indigenous to
  Eurasia where it still grows in the wild. 
  It has been cultivated since before 100 B.C.  The Lake Dwellers of Switzerland and the Romans and Greeks knew
  it.  It is the best known and most
  widespread of all the plums.  It was
  transported to America by the early colonists and is now grown on the
  Atlantic and Pacific coasts and in the lake States.  It is a large tree, 30-40 ft. in height, with variously colored
  fruits.  There are over 950 varieties,
  especially in Europe.  Included are
  the green gages, egg plums and prunes. 
  Prunus
  insititia,
  a smaller and hardier plum, has also been grown as long and occurs wild in
  Europe and Asia.  Varieties include
  the Damson and Bullace Plums.  The
  sloe, P.
  spinosa,
  is another plum used in Europe for making liquors.               The several American plums were
  derived from indigenous species in recent times.  They are hardy and are grown in the Mississippi Valley and in
  the South where European types do not thrive.  Several species are Prunus americana, P. hortulana and P.
  nigra.  The fruits of the last two species are
  small and not very palatable but are used in preserves and marmalades.             The beach plum, Prunus maritima that grows in sandy
  soil from southern Maine to Virginia, is used to make an excellent preserve
  and could eventually become of greater commercial importance.               Prunus salicina and other species from
  Japan were introduced into California at the end of the 19th Century.  Luther Burbank and other plant breeders
  developed over 100 new varieties and hybrids.  These plums are a much wider range of cultivation than any
  other type.                 These are
  really plums with high sugar content. 
  Large fruits of European varieties are picked and the skin is
  ruptured.  They are then dried either
  by artificial hear or in the sun, after which they are allowed to “sweat” for
  several weeks.  They are finally
  graded and “glossed.”  The latter
  process consists of heating in steam or salted boiling water, glycerin, or
  fruit juice.  It gives a glossy
  appearance to the surface and also sterilizes the skin.  The prune industry is especially important
  in western California and Oregon.   - - - -
  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -               Gourd fruits are trailing
  tendril-bearing herbs, often of a very large size.  The fruit is a Pepo, a modified berry with a
  hard and firm rind.  They include
  several edible forms such as squash, pumpkin and cucumber, the melons and
  watermelons and the ornamental gourds.               The melon, Cucumis melo, is believed to have
  originated as a wild plant in Southern Asia. 
  It is ancient and was known to the Egyptians and Romans.  The melon reached Europe in the 17th
  Century.  It is now cultivated in most
  warm temperate climates.  Several
  different kinds of melons are grown.                 The Netted or Nutmeg
  Melon is the type grown in greatest quantity in North America.  It is also known as Muskmelon
  and erroneously Cantaloupe.  This
  melon has a soft rind and netted markings on the surface.  There are many varieties.  The true cantaloupe is a European melon
  that is not grown in North America. 
  It has a hard warty rind and dark yellow flesh.  The winter melons, such as the Casaba and Honeydew, are
  larger, smoother and more spherical types. 
  They require a longer season but hold up well in storage.             Melons grow
  best in fertile soil and in a long growing season, with a high temperature
  and abundant moisture and sunlight. 
  Muskmelons are almost ripened on the vines because this increases the
  sweetness and flavor.  The winter
  melons are ripened in storage.  In
  North America, California, Arizona and Colorado lead the production.               Citrullus vulgaris is indigenous in
  tropical Africa where native people have used it since ancient times.  It was cultivated for centuries, reaching
  Egypt and India very early in history, as indicated by its Sanskrit name and
  appearing in Egyptian paintings. 
  Watermelon is an annual plant with extensive vines that may cover a
  whole field and large fruits that may weight over 50 lbs.  The reddish or pink pulp is very sweet and
  juicy with white or black seeds.  The
  varieties differ in the shape of the fruit, its color and the thickness of
  the rind.  The plant requires a
  fertile sandy soil with abundant sunshine. 
  The fruits are picked when fully ripe and resist damage in shipment.             A variety, Citrullus vulgaris
  citroides,
  with a white, more solid flesh is called the Citron Melon
  or preserving melon.  It is used
  in jams, jellies and preserves. 
  Because of its high pectin content it is added to fruit juices that do
  not jell readily.             By the 21st Century seedless
  watermelons arrived on the market, but the flavor is inferior to those that
  bear seeds.   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  - - - - - - -               Grapes are
  technically berries, but their importance warrants special discussion.  They grow wild in many temperate portions
  of America, Europe, Asia and Africa. 
  Birds are known to have distributed them very widely.  Modern cultivated grapes have been derived
  from European and American species. 
  They are grown in home gardens over most of America.  In the United States California leads the
  production with over 90 percent of the crop.               Vitis vinifera is one of the oldest of
  all cultivated plants.  It is believed
  to have originated in the Caspian Sea region of Western Asia.  Grapes are often mentioned in the
  Bible.  They have been grown in Egypt
  before 4,000 B.C. and were highly developed by the Greeks and Romans.  They were spread all over Europe with the
  Roman civilization and now are found in all temperate regions.             The grape is a woody, climbing,
  tendril-bearing vine with large palmate leaves; small, insignificant
  sweet-smelling flowers; and large clusters of fruits.  The European species has ellipsoidal
  fruits with a solid flesh, high sugar content and a relatively thin skin that
  does not slip off the flesh readily. 
  In nature the vines grow rapidly and each a considerable length, but
  in cultivation they are pruned back until they are short stout stumps, 3-4
  ft. in length.  Grapes prefer a loose,
  well-drained soil and hillsides are often used.  Cuttings often propagate them. 
  The European grape is the source of most of the wine grapes.  It is common all over Europe, especially
  in the Mediterranean region.  This
  species is very susceptible to various fungi and insect pests, particularly
  the root louse, Phylloxera.  At
  one time this insect threatened the entire grape industry.  American grapes are not as susceptible and
  they are now used as rootstocks on to which the European varieties are grafted.  Lord Baltimore introduced Vitis
  vinifera into North America as early as 1616 but it did not thrive.  Despite many attempts it has never
  produced high quality wine in the eastern part of the continent.  This is due probably to its susceptibility
  to cold and pests.  West of the Rocky
  Mountains the growing of European grapes has become one of the main
  industries, especially in California. 
  This species is used for wine, raisins, and as a table grape.  The introduction of the Sharpshooter
  leafhopper into California in the latter part of the 20th Century has had a
  devastating effect on the grape industry there because the insect vectors a
  bacterial disease that kills the vines. 
  Special care must now be taken to eliminate breeding reservoirs for
  this insect near the vineyards.               Native American grapes have been
  domesticated and many horticultural varieties of these are grown in Eastern
  North America.  Hybrids between these
  native species and the wine grape also exist.  The northern Fox Grape, Vitis labrusca, of eastern North
  America has given rise to the greatest number, including such well-known
  types as the Concord, Catawba, Delaware and Niagara that are grown primarily
  in the Great Lakes region.  The Muscadine Grape, V. rotundifolia, has given rise to the
  Scuppermong, a long-lived, vigorous variety
  extensively grown in the Atlantic and Gulf States.  Vitis
  vulpina
  and V. aestivalis are also cultivated.             American grapes are larger and
  hardier than the European species. 
  The fruit is round with a more watery flesh and a thin skin that slips
  off very easily.  Their flavor is much
  more pronounced.  They are consumed
  fresh and for making grape juice, jams, jellies and wine.  The wild types are especially flavorful
  and excellent for making jelly and sweet wine.               Grapes are the source of raisins
  and the dried currants of commerce. 
  Raisins are dried grapes prepared from wine grapes with a high sugar
  content and firm flesh.  Both seeded
  and seedless varieties are marketed. 
  The best quality is used for table raisins that are merely dried in
  the sun.  Cooking raisins are prepared
  from poorer grades and often treated with lye and sulfur before drying.  Their cost is also more than the sun dried
  types.  California leads the
  production of raisins in North America.               These are
  small dried grapes prepared from a variety that grows in Greece.  It is a very old type, dating to 75
  A.D.  Currant growing has always been
  an important industry in Greece.   - - - -
  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -               The term “berry” has been used in
  different ways.  Technically a berry
  is a thin-skinned one-celled fleshy fruit with seeds scattered through the flesh.  According to this definition the tomato,
  grape, eggplant and many other fruits are berries, while such fruits as the
  strawberry, raspberry and blackberry are not berries but rather aggregate
  compound fruits (Hill 1952).  For the
  present the term will be used to include the common bush fruits, or berries,
  of cultivation and the mulberry.  In
  almost all of these fruits wild plants serve as an important source of the
  crop, although domesticated forms are developed.               Blackberries and raspberries belong to the genus Rubus
  that includes many species and a vast number of hybrids.               These are erect, decumbent or
  creeping shrubs, usually armed with prickles and thorns.  The erect “canes” die down to the ground
  every few years and are renewed from the rootstalks.  The velvety black fruits are aggregate
  fruits that consist of numerous ovaries of the flower ripened into small
  drupelets.  When picked the fruit does
  not separate from the somewhat fleshy receptacle.  Blackberries can be grown anywhere except in regions with
  severe winters or extreme heat or drought. 
  The blackberry is almost entirely an American fruit with large wild
  stands growing in high rainfall areas of southern Chile and northwestern
  North America.  The cultivated forms
  have been derived mainly from Rubus alleghaniensis, R. argutus and R. frondosus.  Trailing species are known as Dewberries that include R. flagellaris, R. trivialis and R.
  vitifolius.  Blackberries are used fresh and for jams,
  cordials, preserves and canning.               Rubus loganobaccus that originated in
  California has very large fruits with less flavor than blackberry.  It is grown for canning.  The loganberry is usually considered to be
  a hybrid between a blackberry and a raspberry, but it may be a distinct
  species or a variety of R. ursinus. 
  It principal use is for juice.               These are smaller shrubs, usually with
  vigorous, erect bushy habit.  The are
  small plants less than one foot tall at higher latitudes.  They have small bristles or prickles.  The aggregate fruit separates form the
  receptacle when ripe leaving a cavity on one side.  Black raspberries are derived from Rubus occidentalis of eastern North
  America while the red raspberries are from higher latitudes of North America
  and R.
  idaeus
  of
  Europe or its American var. strigosus.  The European species has been cultivated
  since ancient times and was highly prized by the Greeks and Romans.  Raspberries are especially hardy and can
  be grown as far north as Alaska and northern Canada.  They are used fresh or cooked and in jams,
  jellies, vinegar and as a flavoring. 
  Large quantities are canned and frozen.   Blueberries and
  Huckleberries    <Photos>             The greatest source of blueberries
  and huckleberries is from wild plants grown especially in northeastern North
  America.  The plants are low
  ericaceous shrubs, common on acid soil throughout eastern North America.  In the huckleberry the fruit is a
  berrylike drupe, while in the blueberry it is a true berry.  Huckleberries occur primarily in the wild
  state, with Gaylussacia baccata being the principal species.  Blueberries are cultivated in many areas
  on sandy or clayey acid soil and give a much greater increase in size and
  yield over the wild fruit.  In the
  blueberry barrens of Maine and adjacent New Brunswick the plants are so
  abundant in the sterile acid soil that they can be subjected to a kind of
  cultivation.  Yields are maintained by
  burning the area.  Often the berries
  are so numerous that they can be harvested with a cranberry rake.  Blueberries are eaten fresh or cooked,
  chiefly in pies, and large quantities are canned and frozen.  Huckleberries are distinctive in being
  especially flavorful in pies although they contain comparatively larger
  pits.  The principal eastern low-bush
  species are Vaccinium
  myrtilloides,
  V. angustifolium and
  V.
  vacillans;
  the high-bush species of greatest importance include V. atrococcum and V. corymbosum.  Valuable western species include V. ovatum and V. membranaceum.               Cranberries are low trailing woody
  plants typically found in bogs and wet acid soil throughout Northeastern
  North America and Northern Europe.  The
  fruit is a true berry.  The American
  cranberry, Vaccinium
  macrocarpon,
  has been cultivated since 1840.  It is
  grown in acid sandy or soil or peat bogs that can be flooded during the
  winter and spring.  The berries are
  harvested with machinery today, but earlier were raked from the fields.  The cranberry industry in the United
  States is of great importance in Wisconsin and Massachusetts and New
  Jersey.  Most of the crop is canned or
  made into a beverage.  Wild plants of V. macrocarpon and a smaller V. oxycococcus furnish some fruit for
  local consumption.  A small highland
  or mountain cranberry (the Lingonberry), V. vitis-idaea, is more firm and
  spicy and is grown in Scandinavian countries.  The closely related American species, V. vitis-idaea var. minus, is boreal and grows
  in arctic or alpine areas.   Currants and Gooseberries    <Photos>             These berries are usually
  classified in the genus Ribes, although the gooseberries are sometimes
  placed in the genus Grossularia.  They are low, hardy,
  bushy plants and are well adapted to cold climates.  The currants are usually smooth with the flowers and fruits in
  racemes.  In gooseberries the stem is
  usually armed with spines or prickles and the flowers and fruits are
  solitary.             Currants are indigenous in both the New and Old Worlds
  The common red and white currants, Ribes sativum, are natives of
  Eurasia.  They were grown in Europe
  during the Middle Ages and were early brought to America where they have
  become naturalized in many areas. 
  Several varieties are grown, mainly for domestic use.  The plants easily suffer from
  neglect.  They attain their best development
  in cool humid regions.  The European
  black currant,
  Ribes. nigrum,
  also a native of Eurasia, is not widely grown outside Europe.  There are several wild species in America
  with edible fruit, the most important of which is R. americanum.  Currants are used primarily for jellies,
  jams, sauces, pies and wine. 
  Amerindians used them as fresh fruit and additions to other foods,
  especially meat.             The European Gooseberry, Ribes grossularia, is grown in the
  cooler parts of both Europe and America. 
  The tart round fruits may be red, yellow, green or white and hairy or
  smooth, according to the variety.  The
  most important native American species is Ribes hirtellum.               Not a true
  berry, mulberry is a multiple accessory fruit derived from a whole
  inflorescence.  The actual fruits are
  little achenes that are surrounded by the fleshy sepals and grouped together
  with the fleshy axis to form the so-called syncarp.  Mulberries are indigenous in both Asia and America.  The fruits are very juicy but do not have
  pronounced flavor.  They are often fed
  to livestock.             The black mulberry, Morus nigra, is an ornamental tree
  40-60 ft. in height and native to Asia Minor and Persia.  It has been cultivated since ancient
  times.  Mulberries are frequently
  mentioned in the Bible and the tree was familiar to the Greeks and
  Romans.  It reached Europe in the 12th
  Century and is now naturalized in both Europe and America where it is planted
  mostly in the warmer areas.  The fruit
  is black or dark red and is used as a dessert.             The red mulberry, Morus rubra, is the largest of the
  genus and is native to eastern North America.  The bright red or blackish fruits are mostly fed to
  livestock.  The wood has some value.             The white mulberry, Morus alba, with white or pinkish
  fruits, is a small tree that is less hardy than the other species.  It is native to Asia and was introduced
  into both Europe and America for its leaves that serve as food for the
  silkworm.  The fruits are of little
  value.  In Europe the wood is used and
  a yellow dye is obtained from the roots.               The strawberry is an important
  small fruit in most temperate climates. 
  However, it is very perishable. 
  It is not a berry but an aggregate accessory fruit, consisting of a
  number of small dry achenes embedded on the surface of a large fleshy
  receptacle.  The strawberry is a low
  perennial herb with a very short thick stem and trifoliate leaves.  It produces numerous runners that root at
  the tip and are used to propagate the plant. 
  They have been grown in Europe since the 14th Century and in America
  since colonial days.  They require
  only good soil, a temperate climate and lots of sunshine.  In the United States their cultivation has
  been of commercial importance since 1860. 
  Harvesting begins in the South in the winter and progresses northward
  with the advancing season until summer when they fruit in the more northern
  areas.  There are three main sources
  of cultivated strawberries of which there are hundreds of varieties.  The native plant of Eastern North America,
  Fragaria
  virginiana,
  was grown by the early settlers and taken by them to Europe where it has been
  cultivated since the 17th Century. 
  The European Fragaria vesca, is the source of the ever-bearing types.  However, the majority of the cultivated
  forms are derived from Fragaria chiloensis, native to Western America from Chile northward to the
  mountains of Mexico.  This species is
  less hardy than the others, but the fruits are especially large and
  flavorful.  Strawberries are used
  primarily as a dessert, but they are also canned, frozen and used in jams and
  preserves and as a flavoring.   ==================================================================== |