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The Western snowberry (Symphoricarpos occidentalis) belongs to Caprifoliaceae (the Honeysuckle family). It is a deciduous shrub that is distributed from Canada to the northern and central parts of the United States. It grows in open prairies, pine forests, riverbanks and lakeshores, and is 25 to 90 cm tall. The stems are erect and well branched. The leaves are ovate to elliptic, hairless, dark green to blue-green on the upper surface, and pale on the lower surface, with short, stiff wooly hairs along the veins. From May to July, short racemes are produced at the tips of branches and in the upper leaf axils, and the flowers are pale pink to almost white, bell-shaped to funnel-shaped. The fruits are spherical, white or pinkish berries that are mildly poisonous.
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