Vaccinium (of the family Ericaceae) is a genus of berry making plants which contain a few common classes of berries, with the particular section of this genus (Vaccinium cyanococcus) being those plants which bear blueberries. There are several species of plants which bear blueberries, including:
- Rabbiteye blueberry (Vaccinium ashei[1][2] and Vaccinium virgatum[3] are both called this)
- Lowbush blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium[4])
- Northern highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum[5])
- Wild Bog blueberry (Vaccinium uliginosum[6])
- Andean blueberry (Vaccinium floribundum[7])
- Colombian blueberry (Vaccinium meridionale[8])
Other sections include the European blueberry or 'Bilberry' (Vaccinium myrtillus[9]), Natsuhaze (Vaccinium oldhamii[10]), Shashanbo (Vaccinium bracteatum[11]), and cranberries (Vaccinium oxycoccus, of which oxycoccus refers to a subgenus[12]), while some other berries that just happen to be blue-ish in color sometimes falsely carry the blueberry name such as neotropical blueberry (Anthopterus wardii[13]).
The vaccinum family of plants is a fruit bearing family of plants, and the section of this family known as cyanococcus is known to produce blueberries. There are a few species of plants of which blueberries are interchangeably referred to
Blueberries are known to have a high anthocyanin content which confers relatively potent antioxidant potential[14][15] which has been noted to collectively confer about 85% of total antioxidant capacities of blueberries (the rest coming from other flavonoids).[15] The anthocyanin content is variable (changes depending on species of blueberry and analytic technique) but is in the range of 42-187.3mg/g (4.2-18.7%) dry weight[16][17][18][19][20][21][22] and within batch can vary two-fold.[23]
The fruits themselves (not dehydrated powder) tend to have a 201.4-402.8mg/100g range (0.2-0.4%) of anthocyanins,[23] they are mostly rich in the two anthocyanins malvidin and delphinidin.[24][23]
The anthocyanins seem to be stored in the peels (693-8814.9mg/100g dry weight) to a larger degree than the fruit (93.8-528.6mg/100g), and correlate with color of the berries (the darker blue-purple being associated with more anthocyanins).[25]
Blueberries are essentially a source of anthocyanin compounds, similar to other dark berries. They are definitely a respectable source of anthocyanin compounds, but not the highest among darker berries