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Goat's-beard

Aruncus dioicus

Family: Rosaceae Genus: Aruncus Species: dioicus

Synonyms: Aruncus silvester, Actaea dioica

Goat's-beard (en)
Aruncus dioicus β€” flower
Aruncus dioicus β€” flower

Western Herbalism Properties

Actions:
astringent

Botanical Description

Aruncus dioicus, goat’s-beard, is a tall, clump-forming herbaceous perennial in the family Rosaceae growing 1.2–1.8 m tall from a thick woody rootstock. The thin, stiff, upright stems bear large alternate pinnately to bipinnately compound leaves whose lance-ovate leaflets are sharply double-serrate. The species is dioecious, with male and female flowers borne on separate plants; both sexes produce showy plume-like terminal panicles of tiny five-petalled cream-white flowers in early to mid-summer, the staminate inflorescences fuller and more conspicuous than the pistillate. Small dry follicles ripen on the female plants. It has a wide circumboreal distribution, growing in moist deciduous and mixed woodland, streamsides and shaded ravines, often at higher elevations, across temperate Europe, Asia and North America. It favours humus-rich soils in partial shade but tolerates full sun where the soil stays consistently moist, and is widely grown as a bold shade-garden perennial.

Native Region: Alabama, Alaska, Albania, Alberta, Amur, Arkansas, Austria, Belarus, British Columbia, California, Chita, Czechoslovakia, East Himalaya, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Italy, Kamchatka, Kentucky, Khabarovsk, Magadan, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Mongolia, Nepal, North Carolina, North Caucasus, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Poland, Primorye, Romania, Sakhalin, South Carolina, Spain, Switzerland, Tennessee, Transcaucasus, Turkey, Ukraine, Virginia, Washington, West Himalaya, West Virginia, Yakutskiya, Yugoslavia, Yukon

Cultural & Historical Context

Traditional American Uses

Documented Native American uses include:

Β 

Cherokee β€” used as a dermatological aid, an eye medicine, a gynecological aid, an orthopedic aid, and a urinary aid (Hamel & Chiltoskey, 1975).

Β 

Thompson β€” widely used as a gastrointestinal aid and as remedies for colds, miscellaneous disease, dermatological complaints and orthopedic conditions (Turner et al., 1990; Steedman, 1928).

Β 

Bella Coola β€” used as an analgesic, an antidiarrheal, a diuretic, a gastrointestinal aid, a miscellaneous disease remedy and a venereal aid (Smith, 1929; Turner, 1973).

Β 

Makah β€” used as an antirheumatic (external), a dermatological aid, an internal medicine, a kidney aid, a venereal aid, and as a general unspecified medicine; the plant also yielded a dye (Gill, 1983; Gunther, 1973; Turner et al., 1983).

Β 

Kwakiutl β€” used as a cough medicine and as a love medicine (Boas, 1966; Turner & Bell, 1973).

Β 

Skagit β€” used as a cold remedy, a dermatological aid and a throat aid (Gunther, 1973).

Β 

Quileute β€” used as a dermatological aid and as a tonic (Gunther, 1973).

Β 

Quinault β€” used as a dermatological aid (Gunther, 1973).

Β 

Lummi β€” used as a dermatological aid and a miscellaneous disease remedy (Gunther, 1973).

Β 

Klallam β€” used as a dermatological aid (Gunther, 1973).

Β 

Nitinaht β€” used as a febrifuge and a miscellaneous disease remedy (Turner et al., 1983).

Β 

Tlingit β€” used as a blood medicine (Krause, 1956).

Β 

Haihais and Kitasoo β€” unspecified medicinal use (Compton, 1993).

Chemistry & External Identifiers

Trefle ID
266773

Important Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any herbal remedy, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, or taking medications.