St. Lawrence Dewberry
Rubus hispidus
- Native to:
- Canada, Prince Edward I., United States
Bernie,Miklosich, Franz, ritter von, 1812-1891. [from old catalog],Schneider, David Heinrich 1755-1826,Fabricius, Johann Christian, 1745-1808,Zincgref, Julius Wilhelm, 1591-1635, author Merian, Matthaeus, 1593-1650, engraver Marschall, Peter, printer,Woeste, Friedr.,Royal Zoological Society of Ireland
Taxonomy
- Division:
- Magnoliophyta | - Flowering plants
- Family:
- Rosaceae
- Genus:
- Rubus
- Species:
- Rubus hispidus
- USDA Symbol:
- RUPA7
Growth Characteristics
- Life Cycle:
- Perennial
- Growth Habit:
- Subshrub
- Height:
- 60 cm
- Light Requirements:
- Full Sun,Part Shade,Shade
- Drought Tolerance:
- Low
- Bloom Months:
- jun,jul,aug
- Bloom Colors:
- white, pink
- Ground Cover:
- Yes
Wildlife Benefits
- Bees:
- ★☆☆☆☆ Documented bee visitation (GBIF)
Keystone Species Ranking
- Caterpillar Keystone:
- ★★★★★ Butterfly & moth species supported by this genus (NWF)
Host Plant for Caterpillars
Orthotaenia undulana, purplish leafroller moth (Olethreutes permundana)
Reported Fauna Sightings
Moths:Ectoedemia rubifoliella
Garden & Ecology Notes
- Wildlife Value:
- birds, small mammals, bees
- Fall Color:
- red, bronze
- Fire Ecology:
- Fire adapted — tolerates or benefits from fire
- Fire Notes:
- Resprouts vigorously from rhizomes following fire; can increase in abundance post-burn.
Propagation & Germination
- Stratification:
- Warm then cold/moist stratification (double dormancy) — 90–120 days
- Scarification:
- Seed coat scarification required before sowing
- Germination Time:
- 30–180 days
- Notes:
- Double dormancy requiring warm then cold stratification. Scarification improves germination rates.
The above propagation data sourced from Claude AI