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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Lyonia ligustrina

maleberry \male"ber`ry\, male berry \male" ber`ry\n.

  1. (Bot.) A deciduous much-branched shrub ( Lyonia ligustrina) with dense downy panicles of small bell-shaped white flowers; also called swamp andromeda.

    Syn: privet andromeda, he-huckleberry, Lyonia ligustrina.

  2. (Bot.) A kind of coffee. See Pea berry.

Lyonia ligustrina

he-huckleberry \he-huckleberry\ n. A deciduous much-branched shrub ( Lyonia ligustrina) with dense downy panicles of small bell-shaped white flowers.

Syn: maleberry, male berry, privet andromeda, Lyonia ligustrina.

Wikipedia
Lyonia ligustrina

Lyonia ligustrina is a species of flowering plant in the heath family known by the common names maleberry and he-huckleberry. It is native to the eastern United States from Maine to Florida and west to Texas and Oklahoma.

This shrub grows up to 4 meters tall. It has long rhizomes which may send up new stems up to 4 meters apart. The stems have longitudinally furrowed bark. The leaves may be deciduous or not, depending on variety. They are oval in shape and up to 10.5 centimeters long by 5 wide. The small flowers are white. The fruit is a small, dry capsule.

This is a common plant in several types of habitat, including savanna, bog, forest, pocosin, and swamp. It often occurs in ecotones. It can grow in wet and dry habitat types. It is tolerant of fire, budding and sending up shoots from its rhizome if aboveground parts are burned away. It grows in fire-prone habitat types, such as pine barrens.

The plant gets its common names from the fact that it produces hard, dry capsules instead of fleshy, juicy, edible fruits like other Ericaceae species such as huckleberries and blueberries.