Symphoricarpos albus (L.) S. F. Blake
Family: Caprifoliaceae
Common Snowberry
Symphoricarpos albus image
Gerald and Buff Corsi  

Shrub 30 cm - 1 m tall

Leaves: opposite, dull grayish green, 2 - 5 cm long, egg-shaped to oval, sometimes lobed, hairy beneath.

Flowers: stalked, in pairs or in small clusters. Corolla five-lobed, pinkish white, 5 - 9 mm long, bell-shaped, swollen on one side. Lobes half as long or equal to tube. Style included within the corolla.

Fruit: berry-like (drupe), in clusters, white to greenish white, 6 - 15 mm long, waxy. There are two stones inside each drupe.

Twigs: hollow, finely hairy or hairless when young.

Similar species: Symphoricarpos occidentalis is similar but has stalkless flowers with styles exserted from the corolla. Symphoricarpos orbiculatus is also similar but has smaller, greenish to purplish corollas (to 4 mm long) and drupes that are coral-pink to purple. The leaves of the variety S. albus var. laevigatus are typically hairless beneath.

Flowering: June

Habitat and ecology: Typically found on cliff edges and along roadsides, but rare in the Chicago Region.

Occurence in the Chicago region: native

Etymology: Symphoricarpos comes from the Greek words symphoreo, meaning "born together," and karpos, meaning fruit (in reference to the clustered fruits). Albus means white.

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Shrub to 1 m, the younger parts finely hairy or glabrous; lvs ovate or oval, usually hairy beneath, mostly 2-3 cm; fls in pairs on short pedicels or in few-fld, interrupted spikes; cor 5-8 mm, ventricose, the lobes equaling or merely half as long as the tube; anthers 1-1.5 mm, nearly or fully as long as the filaments; style glabrous, 2-3 mm; fr 6-10 mm, white; 2n=36, 54. Our native plants, as here described, are var. albus. The var. laevigatus (Fernald) S. F. Blake, of the Pacific slope, mostly 1-2 m, with the fr mostly 1-1.5 cm, and with the lvs usually glabrous beneath, often escapes from cult. Dry or rocky soil; Que. to s. Alas., s. to Va., Mich., Minn., and Calif. May-July. (S. racemosus)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Symphoricarpos albus image
Gerald and Buff Corsi  
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Symphoricarpos albus image
Gerald and Buff Corsi  
Symphoricarpos albus image
Geraldand Buff Corsi  
Symphoricarpos albus image
Beatrice F. Howitt  
Symphoricarpos albus image
William R. Hewlett  
Symphoricarpos albus image
Beatrice F. Howitt