Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Snowberry2020-2.jpg

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Ranging from toxic to poisonous to humans and several species of animals - particularly fish, the common snowberry is an important food source for wildlife. Moose, elk, deer, bighorn sheep, and pronghorns will readily eat the foliage, while bears birds, rabbits and other small mammals can safely eat the waxy white berries. This snowberry bush was found growing next to the Green River about 20 miles south of Seattle, Washington on a warm summer day.

Copyright
©2020
Image Size
4912x7360 / 20.1MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Angiosperms, Asterids, Briscoe Park, Caprifoliaceae, Dipsacales, Eudicots, Kent, King County, Lonicera alba, Plantae, S. albus, Symphoricarpos, Symphoricarpos albus, Symphoricarpos pauciflorus, Symphoricarpos rivularis, Vaccinium album, Washington, Xylosteon album, alkaloid, beautiful, beauty, berries, berry, berry-like, botany, branch, caution, color, common, common snowberry, deciduous shrub, dicot, drupe, erect, few-flowered snowberry, field, fleshy, flora, flower, flowers, food, food source, forest, fresh, fruit, green, habitat, honeysuckle, native, natural, nature, opposite leaves, ornamental, oval, perennial, plant, plants, poison, poisonous, rhizome, ripe, shrub, snowberry, spreading, subshrub, summer, thicket, thin-leaved snowberry, toxic, waxberry, white, white coralberry, white snowberry, wild, wildflowers, woodlands
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Poisonous Fruits and Berries
Ranging from toxic to poisonous to humans and several species of animals - particularly fish, the common snowberry is an important food source for wildlife. Moose, elk, deer, bighorn sheep, and pronghorns will readily eat the foliage, while bears birds, rabbits and other small mammals can safely eat the waxy white berries. This snowberry bush was found growing next to the Green River about 20 miles south of Seattle, Washington on a warm summer day.