Plants & People: The Intersection of Botany and Human Experience

Aronia melanocarpa: fine wines to phenols

Historical Accounts

Aronia melanocarpa is one of 16 species in the genus Aronia. The plant is native to North America and Eastern Canada and the berries were used by North American Forest Potawatomi and Abnaki tribes in preparation of pemmican, a high calorie food made from animal fat, dried powdered meat, and sometimes fruit. Also, they used the fruits for medicinal teas, make dyes, cure meats, and as nutritional dried treats in the long winter months. The berries and the bark were used as an astringent.
After World War II, the first shrubs of Aronia melanocarpa were brought to Europe and Russia, specifically Altai, Moscow, and St. Petersburg. Starting 1946, large- scale black chokeberry cultivation was introduced to the former Soviet Union, including Belarus, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine. In 1976, aronia was introduced to Japan and by the 1980s, it was introduced for cultivation in Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Poland, Slovenia, Denmark and Finland. Poland was the main supplier of chokeberry to Germany despite cultivation being present in East Germany since 1976. In 1996, Jan Mills, president and CEO of Artemis International Inc. took the main commercial cultivars from Polish agricultural schools and brought them back to Indiana. Since then, the chokeberry bush is used as an ornamental plant in the United States. In England, it received the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Merit in 1972 for their white flowers in the spring, green foliage in the summer, and fruits in the late summer and autumn. 

Domestication

Aronia melanocarpa is a popular shrub on the industrial and amateur scale in Central Europe. It is used as an ornamental in the US and the berries are eaten fresh or incorporated into cooking in various locations and industries. In Poland, black chokeberries are used on a large scale by the food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetics industries. In Lithuania, these berries are used to produce wine. In general, Aronia is used in juice, jams, teas, and cordials. In the canning industry, Aronia are used to produce compotes, confitures, fruit jellies, marmalades, and the juices from the fruit are used to adjust or enhance flavor along with coloring. The fresh pressed juice is used as raw material for the manufacture of alcoholic sparkling wines, dessert wines, and liqueurs. In dairy processing, ice cream, yogurts, cream desserts, and sorbets include the berries. Black chokeberries are used for baking, specifically for praline fillings, cake fillings, fruit bars, cereals, and gummy bears. The pomace, or solid remains of the fruit after pressing, are used as color pigment. 

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Morphological Description

Aronia melanocarpa are deciduous, rounded, but upright shrubs that become leggy as they age. These shrubs grow to a height of 2-3 meter but vary based on the particular cultivars. The bark of this shrub is thin and smooth. The leaves are simple and alternately arranged with serrated edges and an elliptical shape. Since the Aronia melanocarpa are deciduous, the leaves change color in the fall. Throughout the year, the leaves are gold or yellow and dark green but as fall approaches, the leaves turn into a burgundy or red color. Aronia melanocarpa produce 20-30 small white flowers that eventually mature into dark purple berries that span in diameter from 6 to 13 millimeters and weigh from .5 to 2 grams, similar to the size of blueberries. The small white flowers are arranged in inflorescences and each have 4-5 white petals with pink anthers. They are protogynous and self compatible and reproduce apomictically via gametophytic apomixis, which results in embryos identical or nearly identical to maternal plants. The primary pollinators of these shrubs are bees. Reproduction is mainly by seed. These seeds are small, slightly more than 1/16 of an inch. These seeds must be cleaned and dried after harvest for the best germination. 
Aronia melanocarpa are tolerant to a wide variety of soil conditions including wet boggy soils. They can withstand these wet conditions allowing them to grow along ponds, streams, or water gardens. Aronia melanocarpa are typically found in bogs, cliffs, ledges, fens, swamps, woodlands, and wetlands. These shrubs do well in full sun and in partial shade. Butterflies, pollinators, small mammals, and songbirds tend to be attracted to the aronia berries and flowers. 


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