Callicarpa pedunculata
Beauty Berry
Beauty Berry
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Asterids > Lamiales > Lamiaceae > Callicarpa
Other links:
Common name: Beauty Berry
Conservation status: ...
Etymology:
Flowers:
The flowers are in clusters, white to pinkish
Fruit:
The fruit is a berry, 2–5 mm diameter and pink to red-purple with a highly distinctive metallic lustre, are very conspicuous in clusters on the bare branches after the leaves fall
The berries last well into the winter or dry season and are an important survival food for birds and other animals, though they will not eat them until other sources are depleted
The berries are highly astringent but are made into wine and jelly
Leaves:
The temperate species are deciduous, the tropical species evergreen
The leaves are simple, opposite, and 5–25 cm long
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
Habitat:
Distribution:
They are native to east and southeast Asia (where the majority of the species occur), Australia, Madagascar, southeast North America and South America
Additional notes:
Callicarpa (beautyberry) is a genus of shrubs and small trees in the family Lamiaceae
Callicarpa species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species in Asia including Endoclita malabaricus and Endoclita undulifer
Familiar species
American beautyberry (Callicarpa americana) is native to the southeastern United States.[9] It can typically reach 1 to 2 meters in height. A jelly can be made from its ripe berries.
Ornamental varieties of Callicarpa americana have been bred to have pink or white berries.
Bodinier's beautyberry (Callicarpa bodinieri), native to west-central China (Sichuan, Hubei, Shaanxi), is more cold-tolerant than C. americana, and is the species most widely cultivated in northwestern Europe. It can reach 3 meters tall.
Japanese beautyberry (Callicarpa japonica), native to Japan, is also cultivated in gardens. It is called Murasakishikibu in Japanese, in honor of Murasaki Shikibu.
Purple beautyberry (Callicarpa dichotoma), native to Japan, China, and Korea.
Uses
Insect repellent
American beautyberry has been used as a folk remedy to prevent mosquito bites
Four chemicals isolated from Callicarpa have been shown to act as insect repellents: borneol, callicarpenal, intermedeol, and spathulenol
The use of callicarpenal has been patented by the United States Department of Agriculture's Agriculture Research Service as a mosquito repellent
Sources of information:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callicarpa (Jan 2024)