Heath Family

Pacific Madrone © DSchiel

Ericaceae (er-i-KAY-see-ee)

Iconic Features

  • Usually shrubs or trees
  • Peeling bark
  • Leathery, simple leaves
  • Urn- or bell-shaped flowers

Description (Jepson)

  • Eudicotyledons (eudicots) – a major lineage of flowering plants including most plants traditionally described as dicots and generally characterized by
    • 2 seed leaves (dicotyledon)
    • Netted (reticulate) leaf venation
    • Flower parts in fours and fives
    • Pollen grains with 3 pores (tricolpate)
    • Vascular bundles in stem arranged in a ring
    • Taproot system
  • Herbaceous perennials, shrubs, and trees
  • Bark often with distinctive peeling
  • Leaves
    • Simple (not divided into leaflets)
    • Alternate (1 leaf at each junction with stem) or opposite (2 leaves at each junction with stem)
    • Evergreen or deciduous; often leathery
  • Flowers
    • Inflorescence (flower arrangement) in many forms
    • Generally bisexual and radially symmetrical flowers, often bell- or urn-shaped
    • Anthers open by pores or slits
    • Ovary superior (above the attachment of other flower parts) or inferior (below the attachment of other flower parts)
  • Fruit is a berry (a usually multi-seeded fruit with a fleshy ovary wall), a drupe (a fleshy fruit with usually 1 seed in a hard inner shell — a stone fruit), or capsule (a dry, multi-chambered fruit that splits open at maturity)

Notes

  • Approximately 3,000 species worldwide
    • Includes blueberries, rhododendrons, azaleas, heathers, and manzanitas
  • Adapted to grow on acidic, nutrient-poor, sandy soils
  • Many plants in this family (e.g. manzanitas and madrones) are pollinated most efficiently by “buzz pollination”
    • Flowers have specialized, tube-shaped “poricidal anthers”
      • Unlike most anthers, these anthers have firmly-attached pollen and small pores that act like the openings on a pepper shaker (Rosenthal 2008) to regulate dispersal of pollen
    • Bumblebees, along with a few other native bees, can release this pollen by grasping the flower with their legs or mouthparts and vibrating their flight muscles without moving their wings
      • Watch this short video to see how buzz pollination works (KQED 2016)
      • Vibrating bees may generate forces 50x that of gravity–5x what fighter jet pilots experience (U. of Stirling 2020)
      • Although the pitch of this vibration is often described as a “middle-C,” the frequency of the vibrations is quite varied and complex, differing even within the same plant or bee species (Vallejo-Marin 2019)
    • Only about 6% of the world’s flowering species are most efficiently pollinated by buzz-pollinating bees (Vallejo-Marin 2019), including
    • Buzz pollination is a good example of convergent evolution
      • Poricidal anthers have evolved several times in disparate plant families, as has the ability of some bee species to buzz-pollinate flowers (Vallejo-Marin 2019)
  • Scientific name from the included genus Erica, from the Latin for “heath”
  • Also known as the Blueberry family
  • Represented by 4 species at Edgewood

Specific References

Campbell, K. 2023, April 3. Buzz pollination is just for bees. Bird Town Pennsylvania.

KQED San Francisco. 2016, Jul. 9. This vibrating bumble bee unlocks a flower’s hidden treasure [Video]. Deep Look. YouTube.

Rosenthal, S. 2008, June 11. Buzz pollination. Bay Nature. 

University of Stirling. 2020, Jul. 29. Bees’ buzz is more powerful for pollination, than for defense or flight. ScienceDaily.

Vallejo-Marin, M. 2019. Buzz pollination: studying bee vibrations on flowers. New Phytologist 224: 1068-1074.

General References

Calflora Database. 2014. Berkeley, California.

Calscape. 2018. California Native Plant Society.

Charters, M.L. 2015. California Plant Names: Latin and Greek Meanings and Derivations.

Charters, M.L. 2017. Southern California Wildflowers: Guide to the Pronunciation of Specific, Generic and Family Names.

Corelli, T. 2004. Flowering Plants of Edgewood Natural Preserve (2nd. ed.). Monocot Press, Half Moon Bay, California.

Elpel, T.J. 2013. Botany in a Day: The Patterns Method of Plant Identification. HOPS Press, Pony, Montana.

Flora of North America. efloras.org.

Harris, J.G., and M.W. Harris. 2013. Plant Identification Terminology: An Illustrated Glossary. Spring Lake Publishing, Spring Lake, Utah.

Keator, G. 2009. California Plant Families. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles, California.

Native American Ethnobotany DB.

Regents of the University of California. Jepson eFlora. Jepson Herbarium. University of California, Berkeley.

Browse Some Edgewood Plants in this Family