The leaves provide food for some animals, including
Lepidoptera such as the
case-bearer moth Coleophora anatipennella. Dogberries are eaten by some mammals and many birds. Many
frugivorous passerines find them simply irresistible, and prefer them over fruits grown by humans. The plant is thus often grown in
organic gardening and
permaculture to prevent harm to
orchard crops, while benefiting from the fact that even frugivorous birds will hunt
pest insects during the breeding season, as their young require much protein to grow. Garden varieties are often called "winter fire" because the leaves turn orange-yellow in autumn and then fall to reveal striking red winter stems. The straight woody shoots produced by the plant can be used as prods, skewers or arrows. The prehistoric archer known as
Ötzi the Iceman, discovered in 1991 on the border between Italy and Austria, was carrying arrow shafts made from dogwood. The common name, dogwood, comes from
C. sanguinea, the wood of which Northern Europeans frequently used to make
treenails ("dags"), dowels, and pegs prior to the industrial revolution. The wood of
C. sanguinea is unusually hard, dense, and tough and has an oily finish which aids in driving pegs into holes. ==References==