Trending: chokecherry (Prunus virginiana) — 345 observations this week
iNaturalist Community
Native Plants
Chokecherry thickets along roadsides and forest edges are ripening right now, and the dark astringent berries you can spot on your next walk are edible when cooked — and have fed Indigenous communities for thousands of years as pemmican and syrup.
Chokecherry is a native North American shrub that produces small, dark red to almost-black berries every summer. This week, hundreds of people across the continent photographed and identified it in the wild, making it one of the most-spotted plants of the moment. The berries are too bitter to eat raw but transform into rich jams, jellies, and syrups once cooked — a foraging prize hiding in plain sight along trails and fence lines.
Key Findings
345 research-grade observations of chokecherry were recorded on iNaturalist in a single week, placing it among the top trending plant species.
The surge in sightings aligns with the species' summer fruiting window, when its distinctive dark berry clusters are most visible and identifiable.
Chokecherry is a native species with broad range across North America, making this observation spike meaningful for tracking phenology and distribution shifts.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana) is surging in community observations this week, with 345 research-grade sightings logged on iNaturalist — signaling that this native shrub is actively fruiting or flowering across North America and catching the attention of naturalists in force.
Abstract Preview
chokecherry is among the most observed plant species this week with 345 research-grade observations.
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Species Mentioned
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Prunus virginiana, commonly called bitter-berry, chokecherry, Virginia bird cherry, and western chokecherry, is a species of bird cherry native to North America.