Canadian Moonseed
Canadian Moonseed | ||||||||||||||
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File:Menispermum canadense BB.jpg | ||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Menispermum canadense L. |
Menispermum canadense (Canadian Moonseed, Common Moonseed, or Yellow Parilla) is a flowering plant in the family Menispermaceae, native to eastern North America, from southern Canada south to northern Florida, and from the Atlantic coast west to South Dakota and Texas. It occurs in thickets, moist woods, and the banks of streams.
It is a woody climbing vine growing to 6 m tall. The leaves palmately lobed, 5-20 cm diameter with 3-7 shallow lobes, occasionally rounded and unlobed. The fruit are produced in 6-10 cm diameter clusters of purple-black berries, each berry is 1-1.5 cm in diameter. The seed inside the berry resembles a crescent moon, and is responsible for the common name. The fruit is ripe between September and October, the same general time frame in which wild grapes are ripe.
Both the leaves and fruit resemble that of the Fox Grape (Vitis labrusca); confusion can be dangerous as Moonseed fruit is poisonous, unlike the edible Fox Grape fruit.
The root is a rhizome, so one specimen can form colonies of genetically identical plants.
Warning
All parts of these plants are known to be poisonous.[1]The fruit of Canada Moonseed are poisonous and can be fatal. While foraging for wild grapes one should examine the seeds of the fruit to make sure one is not eating moonseeds: moonseeds are crescent, while grapes have circular seeds. Differences in taste should also be an indicator of whether or not a specimen is grape or Moonseed.
Uses
The Cherokee used Moonseed as a laxative, and as a gynecological and venereal aid. The root was used for skin diseases. The Lenape used it in a salve for sores on the skin.[2] It has been used for a variety of medicinal uses by Americans of European descent.[3]
References
- 1) Lee Allen Peterson, Edible Wild Plants, (New York City: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1977), p. 50