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Sambucus
・ Sambucus australasica
・ Sambucus canadensis
・ Sambucus cerulea
・ Sambucus ebulus
・ Sambucus gaudichaudiana
・ Sambucus javanica
・ Sambucus lanceolata
・ Sambucus mexicana
・ Sambucus nigra
・ Sambucus palmensis
・ Sambucus peruviana
・ Sambucus pubens
・ Sambucus racemosa
・ Sambucus racemosa subsp. racemosa


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Sambucus : ウィキペディア英語版
Sambucus

''Sambucus'' (elder or elderberry) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Adoxaceae. It was formerly placed in the honeysuckle family, Caprifoliaceae, but was reclassified due to genetic evidence. It contains between 5 and 30 species of deciduous shrubs, small trees and herbaceous perennial plants.
The genus occurs in temperate to subtropical regions of the world. More widespread in the Northern Hemisphere, its Southern Hemisphere occurrence is restricted to parts of Australasia and South America. Many species are widely cultivated for their ornamental leaves, flowers and fruit.
The leaves are pinnate with 5–9 leaflets (rarely 3 or 11). Each leaf is long, and the leaflets have serrated margins. They bear large clusters of small white or cream-colored flowers in late spring; these are followed by clusters of small black, blue-black, or red berries (rarely yellow or white).
==Species groups==

* The black-berried elder complex is variously treated as a single species ''Sambucus nigra'' found in the warmer parts of Europe and North America with several regional varieties or subspecies, or else as a group of several similar species. The flowers are in flat corymbs, and the berries are black to glaucous blue; they are larger shrubs, reaching tall, occasionally small trees up to tall and with a stem diameter of up to .
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* ''Sambucus australis'' (southern elder or maquiberry; South America)
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* ''Sambucus canadensis'' (syn. ''S. nigra ssp canadensis''; American elder; eastern North America; with blue-black berries)
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* ''Sambucus cerulea'' (syn. ''S. caerulea'', ''S. coerula'', ''S. glauca''; blue elderberry, nō-kōm-hē-i'-nē, Konkow language); western North America; dark blue-black berries with glaucous bloom on surface, giving them a sky-blue appearance.
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* ''Sambucus javanica'' (Chinese elder; southeastern Asia)
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* ''Sambucus nigra'' (elder or black elder; Europe and western Asia; with black berries) This is the species most often used medicinally.
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* ''Sambucus lanceolata'' (Madeira elder; Madeira Island; with black berries)
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* ''Sambucus mexicana'' (Mexican elder; Sonoran Desert; with black berries)
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* ''Sambucus palmensis'' (Canary Islands elder; Canary Islands; with black berries)
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* ''Sambucus peruviana'' (Peruvian elder; northwest South America; with black berries)
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* ''Sambucus simpsonii'' (Florida elder; southeastern United States; with blue-black berries)
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* ''Sambucus velutina'' (velvet elder; southwestern North America; with blue-black berries)
* The blackberry elder ''Sambucus melanocarpa'' of western North America is intermediate between the preceding and next groups. The flowers are in rounded panicles, but the berries are black; it is a small shrub, rarely exceeding tall. Some botanists include it in the red-berried elder group.
* The red-berried elder complex is variously treated as a single species ''Sambucus racemosa'' found throughout the colder parts of the Northern Hemisphere with several regional varieties or subspecies, or else as a group of several similar species. The flowers are in rounded panicles, and the berries are bright red; they are smaller shrubs, rarely exceeding tall.
*
* ''Sambucus callicarpa'' (Pacific Coast red elderberry; west coast of North America)
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* ''Sambucus chinensis'' (Chinese red elder; eastern Asia, in mountains)
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* ''Sambucus latipinna'' (Korean red elder; Korea, southeast Siberia)
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* ''Sambucus microbotrys'' (mountain red elder; southwest North America, in mountains)
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* ''Sambucus pubens'' (American red elder; northern North America)
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* ''Sambucus racemosa'' (European red elder or red-berried elder; northern Europe, northwest Asia, central North America)
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* ''Sambucus sieboldiana'' (Japanese red elder; Japan and Korea)
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* ''Sambucus tigranii'' (Caucasus red elder; southwest Asia, in mountains)
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* ''Sambucus williamsii'' (North China red elder, "jie gu mu," 接骨木; northeast Asia)
* The Australian elder group comprises two species from Australasia. The flowers are in rounded panicles, and the berries white or yellow; they are shrubs growing to high.
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* ''Sambucus australasica'' (yellow elder; New Guinea, eastern Australia)
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* ''Sambucus gaudichaudiana'' (Australian elder or white elder; shady areas of south eastern Australia)
* The dwarf elders are, by contrast to the other species, herbaceous plants, producing new stems each year from a perennial root system; they grow to tall, each stem terminating in a large flat umbel which matures into a dense cluster of glossy berries.
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* ''Sambucus adnata'' (Asian dwarf elder; Himalaya and eastern Asia; berries red)
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* ''Sambucus ebulus'' (European dwarf elder; central and southern Europe, northwest Africa and southwest Asia; berries black)
Other species:
* ''Sambucus melanocarpa'' Gray (western elder)〔Kearney, T.H. & R. H. Peebles. 1960. Arizona Flora. University of California Press. Berkeley, CA.

* ''Sambucus neomexicana'' Wooton (New Mexico elder)〔
* ''Sambucus velutina'' Dur. & Hilg. (velvet elder; mountains of western Arizona)〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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