The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
North American wild strawberry with sweet scarlet fruit; a source of many cultivated strawberries
Synonyms: scarlet strawberry, Fragaria virginiana
| WordNet: Virginia strawberry |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
North American wild strawberry with sweet scarlet fruit; a source of many cultivated strawberries
Synonyms: scarlet strawberry, Fragaria virginiana
| 5min Related Video: Virginia strawberry |
| Wikipedia: Virginia strawberry |
| Virginia strawberry | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Division: | Magnoliophyta |
| Class: | Magnoliopsida |
| Order: | Rosales |
| Family: | Rosaceae |
| Genus: | Fragaria |
| Species: | F. virginiana |
| Binomial name | |
| Fragaria virginiana Duchesne |
|
The Virginia Strawberry (Fragaria virginiana), is one of two species of strawberry that were hybridized to create the modern domesticated Garden Strawberry. Its natural range is confined to North America, in the United States (including Alaska) and Canada, although a popular variety called "Little Scarlet" grows only in Great Britain, having been imported from the United States in the early 1900s.
It is also sometimes called "Wild Strawberry", though this can also refer to several other species of Fragaria, particularly F. vesca.
There are four recognized subspecies:
All strawberries have a base haploid count of 7 chromosomes. Fragaria virginiana is octoploid, having eight sets of these chromosomes for a total of 56. These eight genomes pair as four distinct sets, of two different types, with little or no pairing between sets. The genome composition of the octoploid strawberry species has generally been indicated as AAA'A'BBB'B'. The A-type genomes were likely contributed by diploid ancestors related to Fragaria vesca or similar species, while the B-type genomes seem to descend from a close relative of Fragaria iinumae. The exact process of hybridization and speciation which resulted in the octoploid species is still unknown, but it appears that the genome compositions of both Fragaria chiloensis and Fragaria virginiana (and by extension the cultivated octoploid strawberry as well) are identical.
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![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Virginia strawberry". Read more |