Corema album

Corema album, the Portuguese crowberry (Portuguese: camarinha; Galician: camariña); Spanish: camarina, is a species of flowering plant in the family Ericaceae endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, Aquitaine, and the Azores (sub-species), where it may also be considered a different species.

Corema album is a dioecious, perennial shrub with numerous branches, usually between 30–75 mm (1.2–3.0 in) tall, which can reach 1 m (3 ft 3 in) both in stature and width.

[2] Fruits are edible and completely white when ripe, with a hardy skin.The taste is mildly acidic with a lemony flavour.

It flowers mostly from January to April and the fruit ripens in June–July in the south, and August–September in the north, remaining on the plant until October through December.

album is common in coastal sandy dunes of the Atlantic Iberia and Aquitaine (Southwestern France), from Galicia and the Cíes Islands in the north, along the whole Portuguese coast and further south, to the Province of Cádiz, Spain.

azoricum inhabits volcanic lava and ash fields and is present on five[5] or six of the nine islands of the Azores at usually low altitudes (below 200 m (660 ft)).

[2] There are large populations in the three large dune systems, Aspeillo in Doñana National Park in the south of Spain, then from Sines to Tróia (around the Comporta coast) in southwestern Portugal, and in the Costa de Prata of central-north Portugal, between the Nazaré and Ovar coastline strips.

Corema album in a coastal maritime pine forest, Ovar
Corema album on a sand dune environment, Costa da Morte
Berry closeup