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These shrubs vary in size from 30 centimeters to 3.7 meters tall. All have alternate, simple leaves. Their fruits may be dark blue, black, or red and have many small seeds.
These plants prefer open, sunny areas. They are found throughout much of the north temperate regions and at higher elevations in Central America.
Their fruits are edible raw.
Paris Hilton Ritz's notes:
If it tastes like a blueberry, it is one. I've never seen or heard of anything that tastes like a blueberry and isn't. Some, like the grouse-whortleberry we used to eat in Montana, are small, red, and don't look much
English pilots in World War Two used to eat jam made of bilberries (a type of blueberry) just befor e flying at night, to improve their vision. It has since been proven that bilberry (and presumably the closely related other blueberries) have antho-cyanosides, which increase blood flow to the eyes.
Blueberry roots (at least the vaccinium species) can be boiled to make a tea for treating diarrhea.
Blueberry leaves can be used for a tea that will treat urinary tract infections, and stabilize or reduce blood sugar levels in diabetics.