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Russet Buffaloberry

Shepherdia canadensis

A field-guide profile of Russet Buffaloberry, covering recognition, range context, soil ecology, community discovery, and source-backed cautions.

  • northern deciduous shrub
  • subarctic North America into western, central, and northern United States
  • Its leaves can look dusted with silver and rust because they are covered in tiny scales.
Russet Buffaloberry showing opposite leaves.
Image: Walter Siegmund (talk) · CC BY 2.5

At a glance

  • Typenorthern deciduous shrub
  • Rangesubarctic North America into western, central, and northern United States
  • Field markOpposite leaves
  • SafetyObserve without treating this page as use advice
Range & community finds

Where it grows in the wild

Russet Buffaloberry is treated here with conservative range language: subarctic North America into western, central, and northern United States. The public map shows reported observations and does not claim to be a complete habitat map.15

Field marks

How to recognize it

Use several traits together before trusting a quick name match.

Opposite leaves

Start with opposite leaves, then step back to compare the whole plant and setting.

Rusty-silver scales

A closer view of rusty-silver scales helps separate this subject from similar plants.

Small red or yellow fruits

Small red or yellow fruits connects the plant to season, growth form, and surrounding habitat.

Don't mix it up

Lookalikes & how to tell them apart

Look-alikes are common enough that one trait is rarely enough.

Silverberry

Compare habit, leaves, flowers, fruit, and setting together.. This similar plant can share part of the same visual vocabulary, so check multiple field marks before treating the identification as settled.

Autumn olive

Common names and quick image matches can mislead.. Use the scientific name, close details, and habitat context before deciding that two similar plants are the same subject.

The story

Silver-scaled edge shrub in the living scene

Opposite leaves is a small invitation to slow down. In Russet Buffaloberry, that first clue does not stand alone: rusty-silver scales, small red or yellow fruits, and the surrounding soil all help turn a quick glance into a better field question. The first community record behind this page came from MN, United States on 2026-06-14, which gives the profile a real starting point without pretending that one record explains the whole plant. Its leaves can look dusted with silver and rust because they are covered in tiny scales.

Russet Buffaloberry is best read as a silver-scaled edge shrub. Russet buffaloberry carries tiny rusty and silvery scales on its leaves and twigs, giving the shrub a weathered shine even before fruit appears. That is the repeatable doorway into the profile, but the plant still asks for ordinary field patience. Look at the whole shape first, then move closer. Opposite leaves gives the broad signal; rusty-silver scales gives a second check; small red or yellow fruits ties the observation to season and setting. If the name comes from an app, a label, or memory, compare at least two of those details before trusting it.

The range story stays careful because a public map is not the same thing as a complete habitat map. For this profile, Russet Buffaloberry is described as subarctic North America into western, central, and northern United States. The distribution image uses reported observations and should be read as a pattern of records, not a promise that the plant is absent from every blank place or present in every marked place. That distinction matters for cultivated plants, hybrids, broad groups, and species that move with gardens, roadsides, birds, wind, or people.

Soil brings the story back down to the ground. This shrub often works along dry, open, or wooded edges where leaf litter is thin and roots hold in well-drained mineral soil. This is where the plant stops being a loose name and becomes part of a living scene. Leaves shade the surface, stems catch litter, roots or runners hold their place, and the next season begins from the parts that survive below or close to the soil line. Insects, birds, fungi, weather, and disturbance may all enter that scene, but the first evidence is often underfoot.

People have noticed Russet Buffaloberry for practical, ornamental, edible, or historical reasons, depending on the subject and place. This page keeps that material as context, not instruction. The safest field habit is observation: photograph the whole plant, add one close detail, and note whether it grows in garden soil, open sand, lawn, forest humus, rock, or a disturbed edge. Those plain notes are often more useful than a dramatic claim.

Before leaving the plant, pause for one comparison. Look from the nearest leaf or flower back to the whole setting, then compare a possible look-alike. Notice the plant, the soil, and the season in the same frame. Russet Buffaloberry becomes more memorable when it is seen doing something: storing, climbing, sheltering, spreading, holding, warning, or returning from the ground after weather has changed.

Ecology

Its place in the ecological web

The strongest profile of Russet Buffaloberry includes the organisms and ground conditions around it.

Ecological web

Seasonal visitors and seed movement

Flowers, fruits, seeds, or leaves connect this plant to insects, birds, wind, people, or disturbance depending on season and place.12

Soil

Soil & ground connection

This shrub often works along dry, open, or wooded edges where leaf litter is thin and roots hold in well-drained mineral soil.12

Timing

When to look

The visible season depends on local climate, but the profile uses broad windows for leaves, flowers, fruits, or seed movement.12

Leaves
Flowers
  • Peak bloom
  • Fading & dried heads
  • Leaves out
In Leafari

Found one? Keep a field journal

Save this species to your journal, earn its badge, and see community discoveries on an approximate, privacy-safe map.

  1. 1Photograph the whole plant so growth form and setting are visible.
  2. 2Add a close view of leaves, flowers, fruit, seed structures, or stems.
  3. 3Notice the surrounding soil, shade, moisture, and disturbed-ground context.
Russet Buffaloberry community badge artwork.

Russet Buffaloberry Badge

Earned when you identify this species in Leafari.

In the Leafari community

1Total finds logged
1Explorers journaled it

First found in MN, United States, by Gentle-Seeker

References

Sources

Key facts and claims trace back to a named reference. Superscript numbers in the text link here.

  1. Plants of the World Online: Shepherdia canadensis Description, range, ecology, or safety context
  2. Maine Natural Areas Program: Shepherdia canadensis Description, range, ecology, or safety context
  3. GBIF species record: Shepherdia canadensis Taxon key and observations
  4. Leafari app records First-found and community snapshot