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Frangula

Frangula is a genus of about 56 species of flowering shrubs or small trees, commonly known as buckthorn, in the buckthorn family Rhamnaceae. The common name buckthorn is also used to describe species of the closely related genus Rhamnus in the same family, and also the superficially similar but unrelated sea-buckthorn, Hippophae rhamnoides in the Elaeagnaceae.

Description
Frangula species are deciduous or evergreen shrubs or small trees (to 12 metres tall in F. purshiana) with dark grey-brown to blackish bark; alternate, simple leaves with stipules, buds without bud scales, branches without spines; and flowers with five small petals (cf. usually four in Rhamnus) and undivided styles. The fruit is a two- to four-seeded berry; it is dispersed by birds. ==Taxonomy==
Taxonomy
The species were formerly usually included within Rhamnus as a subgenus, but have increasingly been treated as a distinct genus in their own right. The designated lectotype species is Frangula alnus Mill., based on Rhamnus frangula L. The following species are accepted by the Plants of the World Online database (POWO): • Frangula acuminataFrangula alnus – alder buckthorn • Frangula austrosinensisFrangula azoricaFrangula betulifolia – birchleaf buckthorn • Frangula breedloveiFrangula californica – California buckthorn, coffeeberry • Frangula capreifoliaFrangula caroliniana – Carolina buckthorn • Frangula chimalapensisFrangula chrysophyllaFrangula circumscissaFrangula crenataFrangula darienensisFrangula dianthesFrangula discolorFrangula glaberrimaFrangula goudotianaFrangula grandifloraFrangula grandifoliaFrangula granulosaFrangula griseaFrangula henryiFrangula hintoniiFrangula inconspicuaFrangula lindenianaFrangula longipedicellataFrangula longipesFrangula longistylaFrangula macrocarpaFrangula marahuacensisFrangula mcvaughiiFrangula microphyllaFrangula mucronataFrangula neblinensisFrangula obovataFrangula oreodendronFrangula palmeriFrangula paruensisFrangula pedunculataFrangula pendulaFrangula pinetorumFrangula polymorphaFrangula pringleiFrangula pubescensFrangula purshiana – cascara buckthorn • Frangula revolutaFrangula rhododendriphyllaFrangula riojaeFrangula rubra – red buckthorn • Frangula rupestrisFrangula scopulorumFrangula sphaerospermaFrangula surotatensisFrangula uleiFrangula wendtii One natural hybrid is also accepted by POWO: • Frangula × blumeri ==Distribution==
Distribution
The genus has a near-cosmopolitan distribution, occurring throughout most of Europe and the Americas, large parts of Asia, and the far northwest of Africa; it is absent from Africa south of the Sahara, the Indian Subcontinent, and Australasia. ==Uses==
Uses
The European species, alder buckthorn (Frangula alnus) was of major military importance in the 15th to 19th centuries, as its wood provided the best quality charcoal for gunpowder manufacture. As with Rhamnus species, the berries are a powerful purgative. ==References==
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