My
family and I were eating a picnic dinner, when my son asked me if the plants in
the pot on the picnic table were wild strawberries. Because of the shape of their leaves, I had
thought they were back when I had gathered them from the wilder edges of my yard
and saved them from the lawnmower. But when
I took a closer look at the fruit, I wasn’t so certain, since it didn’t look
quite right, especially with those little bumpy, tentacle like things!
And
when I cut it in half, it looked even less like a strawberry. That is when I remembered that its flowers
were yellow, not white like those of the wild strawberry, fragaria vesca.
So,
“what the heck is this plant, and are the fruits edible”, I wondered?
It
turned out to be a “Indian Strawberry” or
as it is also known “The Wild Indian Strawberry”, the “Mock
Strawberry”, the “False Strawberry”, or the “She Mei”, and in
Latin it is “potentilla indica”. It
is a member of the rose family and is native to southeast Asia, though it has
been introduced to many other areas, both as a medicinal and as an ornamental
plant. It is now naturalized in many parts
of the world but is considered invasive in some regions of the United States and
Canada.
Indian
Strawberries are edible, though they are not delicious like wild strawberries, being
spongy and rather tasteless. However, the
fruit of this plant is eaten by deer, birds, raccoons, squirrels, rabbits and
other rodents.
While
humans might find Indian Strawberries to be rather bland, historically they
have been held to have important medical benefits. According to modern researchers, extracts of
indian strawberries show antioxidant, antibiotic, cytotoxic, anti-inflammatory and
antimicrobial properties. Its fruit is
also used as a fever reducer (febrifuge), a tonic, and in eye infections, and a
water extract of the leaves has also been used as anthelmintic to expel
parasitic worms (helminths) and other internal parasites.
The
fruit contains fructose, protein and vitamin C (ascorbic acid), vitamin D, and
iron. The fresh leaves can be used as a pot
or cooking herb. The fresh leaves can be
crushed and applied externally as a medicinal poultice, to treat boils, abscesses,
burns, weeping eczema, ringworm, snake or insect bites and traumatic injuries.
So,
now we all know a little more about the Indian Strawberry and I am really glad
that I saved these plants from the lawn mower.
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE. Don’t forget to follow me on both The
Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE,
and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube. If you have questions, as always, feel free
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That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
Sources
Liaqat, Muhammad, Ullah Kakar,
Ihsan, Akram, Muhammad, Hussain, Shahzad, Ullah Kakar, Mohib, Ahmad,
Nadeem, and Faryal, Rani; Antimicrobial and
phytochemical exploration of Duchesnea indica Plant, Plant Cell
Biotechnology and Molecular Biology, 22(49&50), page 74-85, September 2021,
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/354339657_ANTIMICROBIAL_AND_PHYTOCHEMICAL_EXPLORATION_OF_Duchesnea_indica_PLANT,
accessed July 13, 2024
O’Brien, Meghan; “Indian
Strawberry”, December 2006, [© Bellarmine University, Louisville, KY
2002-2004], https://www.bellarmine.edu/faculty/drobinson/IndianStrawberry.asp#:~:text=It%20is%20used%20in%20the,insect%20bites%20and%20traumatic%20injuries,
accessed July 11, 2024
Sprout, Susan; “Underfoot: Mock
Strawberry or Indian Strawberry”, November 8, 2022, https://npcweb.org/underfoot-mock-strawberry-or-indian-strawberry/#:~:text=Potentilla%20indica%2C%20previously%20known%20as,makes%20a%20great%20ground%20cover, accessed July 11, 2024
USDA; “Duchesnea indica
(Andrews) Teschem, Indian strawberry”, https://plants.usda.gov/home/plantProfile?symbol=DUIN2,
accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia;
“coupes transversale et longitudinale du fruit du fraisier des Indes
(Potentilla indica)”, by ruizo, June 9, 2006, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fraisier_dinde_fruit_coupe.jpg,
accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia; “Flower of
Fragaria vesca, east Bohemia, Czech Republic”, by Karelj, April 2011, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fragaria_vesca_Jahodn%C3%ADk_obecn%C3%BD_1.jpg,
accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia; “Fragaria
vesca: English: Woodland Strawberry, Wood Strawberry”, by Walter Siegmund, May
18, 2010, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fragaria_vesca_5044.JPG,
accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia; “Scheinerdbeere (Potentilla indica) in Saarbrücken”, by AnRo0002, August
16, 2014, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:20140816Potentilla_indica2.jpg, accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia; “Tashkent
botanical garden”, by Mrshaxas, May 21, 2023, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Potentilla_indica_(1).jpg,
accessed July 11, 2024
Wikimedia; “Wild
strawberry (Fragaria vesca) in a garden in Bamberg”, by Reinhold Möller, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Walderdbeere_Frucht-20210617-RM-124006.jpg,
accessed July 11, 2024
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