Almost every berry of that variety is edible without consequence and most are delicious. This is a blackberry from the look of it so you should definitely be ok.
A_Lountvink
Florida has quite a few native Rubus species, all of which are safe. This is probably one of the more common ones, but you would have to compare both the primocanes (non-flowering first year growth) and second year stems (the fruiting ones) to see if all the features match.
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Almost every berry of that variety is edible without consequence and most are delicious. This is a blackberry from the look of it so you should definitely be ok.
Florida has quite a few native Rubus species, all of which are safe. This is probably one of the more common ones, but you would have to compare both the primocanes (non-flowering first year growth) and second year stems (the fruiting ones) to see if all the features match.
[Observations · iNaturalist](https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=21&taxon_id=47544&view=species)
Rubus sp.
Yes, I’m tempted to eat those at the edge of Cracker Barrel’s porch near the rocking chairs. Lots of them larger and black yum. Jax Fl
none of the rubus ssp. are toxic. some of them are bland, mealy, or sour though. unfortunately I can’t tell you what exact species this is
That definitely looks like wild blackberry.