Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Black Huckleberry

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A Pacific Northwest delicacy! The black huckleberry is an important and nutritious food source for black and grizzly bears, which consume not only the berries but also other plant parts, as well as deer, elk, moose, and ruffed grouse. Commonly reaching 6 feet in height, it is common to understory shrub, dry to moist coniferous forests, and open areas. These were found growing in the Western Olympic Mountains of Washington in the Hoh Rainforest.

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©2015 All Rights Reserved
Image Size
6000x4000 / 13.5MB
Keywords
Angiosperms, Asterids, Ericaceae, Ericales, Eudicots, Hoh Rain Forest, Hoh Rainforest, Jefferson County, Olympic Mountains, Olympic National Park, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Plantae, V. membranaceum, Vaccinium, Vaccinium coccineum, Vaccinium globulare, Vaccinium membranaceum, Vaccinium membranaceum var. rigidum, Washington, background, beautiful, beauty, berries, berry, big huckleberry, black, black huckleberry, blue, blue huckleberry, botany, color, deciduous, dicot, edible, field, flora, flower, flowers, food, food source, forage, foraging, fresh, fruit, green, heath, huckleberry, mountain huckleberry, native, natural, nature, plant, plants, rain forest, rainforest, red, ripe, shrub, square-twig blueberry, summer, sweet, tall huckleberry, tasty, thinleaf huckleberry, west coast, wild, wildflowers, yummy
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Huckleberries
A Pacific Northwest delicacy! The black huckleberry is an important and nutritious food source for black and grizzly bears, which consume not only the berries but also other plant parts, as well as deer, elk, moose, and ruffed grouse. Commonly reaching 6 feet in height, it is common to understory shrub, dry to moist coniferous forests, and open areas. These were found growing in the Western Olympic Mountains of Washington in the Hoh Rainforest.