Solanum pseudocapsicum

Solanum pseudocapsicum
Fruiting plant
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae
Genus: Solanum
Species: S. pseudocapsicum
Binomial name
Solanum pseudocapsicum
L.
Dried fruits with seeds of Solanum pseudocapsicum.

Solanum pseudocapsicum is a nightshade species with mildly poisonous fruit. [1]It is commonly known as the Jerusalem cherry,[2] Madeira winter cherry, or, ambiguously, "winter cherry". These perennials can be grown decoratively as house plants, but in some areas of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand it is regarded as a weed.

Overview

The plant is perennial in zones up to USDA 8. Native to Peru and Ecuador, they can survive frosts and cold weather. They generally live up to 10 years, producing fruit usually in their second or third year, and every year after that. They are congeners of tomatoes and the fruit is extremely similar to cherry tomatoes in taste and texture, and are therefore easily confused with them.

The Jerusalem cherry's poison is primarily solanocapsine, which is similar to other alkaloids found in their genus, such as solanine and atropine. Although the toxin is poisonous, it is generally not life-threatening to humans. It may cause gastric problems, including vomiting and gastroenteritis as referenced in the obsolete scientific name S. ipecacuanha (roughly "ipecac nightshade").[3]

Jerusalem cherries are possibly poisonous to cats [4] and some birds.[5] Though Jerusalem cherry is distributed by certain birds in the wild – both where native and where introduced, e.g. in Australia by the pied currawong (Strepera graculina) – most popular pet birds, namely parrots and relatives, are not immune to its poison.

Taxonomy

Supposedly, the plant described as Solanum capsicastrum and called false Jerusalem cherry is a closely related but distinct species, and the trade name "winter cherry" is also held to apply to this exclusively. It is said to be recognizable by more mediocre size, and/or a greyish hue to the foliage and/or stems, and/or fruit that have a pronounced yellow hue when unripe and whose pulp is not or less poisonous (though the seeds still are, making the whole fruit still inedible), and/or higher frost hardiness. But these supposed differences are inconsistently given in various horticultural sources, and no botanical source has in recent times distinguished between the two. Indeed, these taxa are now generally held to refer to the same species, and the "false Jerusalem cherry", if it is at all distinguishable, seems to be a chemotype at best, or just a motley collection of cultivars.[6]

The entire list of now-invalid synonyms of S. pseudocapsicum is long, and many homonyms are included within it:[6]

S. pseudocapsicum has large flowers, typically borne singly. The synonym S. singuliflorum and the homonym S. uniflorum refer to this.
  • Solanum capsicastrum Link ex Schau
  • Solanum capsicastrum var. caaguazuense Chodat
  • Solanum compactum Hort.
  • Solanum diffusum Link ex Roem. & Schult. (non Ruiz & Pav.: preoccupied)
S. diffusum Roxb. ex Wall. is S. virginianum L..S. diffusum ssp. miozygum Bitter and S. diffusum var. miozygum (Bitter) J.F.Macbr. are S. ternatum.
  • Solanum diflorum Vell.
  • Solanum diflorum var. angustifolium Kuntze
Not to be confused with S. angustifolium Mill..
  • Solanum diflorum var. hygrophilum (Schltdl.) Kuntze
  • Solanum diflorum var. pulverulentum Chodat
  • Solanum diphyllum Forssk. (non L.: preoccupied)
  • Solanum diphyllum var. pulverulentum Chodat
S. diphyllum Sessé & Moc. is S. nudum. S. diphyllum Sw. ex Dunal in DC. is an undeterminable Lycianthes species. S. diphyllum Osbeck is a nomen nudum.
  • Solanum dunnianum H.Lév.
  • Solanum eremanthum Dunal
  • Solanum hendersonii Hort. ex W.Wight
  • Solanum hermannioides Schinz
  • Solanum hyemale Salisb.
  • Solanum hygrophilum Schltdl.
  • Solanum ipecacuanha Chodat
  • Solanum ipecacuanha var. calvescens Chodat
  • Solanum ipecacuanha var. obovata Chodat
  • Solanum jaliscanum Greenm.
  • Solanum karstenii Dunal
S. karstenii A.Braun & Bouché is S. felinum.
  • Solanum linkianum Roem. & Schult.
  • Solanum lucidum M.Martens & Galeotti (non Moric.: preoccupied)
S. lucidum Moric. is Aureliana fasciculata (Vell.) Sendtn..
  • Solanum mexiae Standl.
  • Solanum microcarpum Vahl
S. microcarpum Cerv. ex Lag. is S. pubigerum Dunal. S. microcarpum Pav. ex Dunal in DC. is S. corymbosum Jacq..
  • Solanum montevidense Spreng.
  • Solanum plurifurcipilum Bitter
  • Solanum singuliflorum Steud.
  • Solanum tucumanense Griseb.
  • Solanum ulmoides Dunal
  • Solanum uniflorum Vell. (non Dunal in Poir.: preoccupied)
S. uniflorum Meyen ex Nees is S. elaeagnifolium Cav.. S. uniflorum Dunal in Poir. and S. uniflorum Sessé & Moc. are Lycianthes mociniana (Dunal) Bitter. S. uniflorum Lag. is an undeterminable Lycianthes species.
  • Solanum validum Rusby
The species' variable habitus has given rise to many supposed varieties.

As can be seen by the "false Jerusalem cherry" case, several presumed forms, subspecies and varieties have been described of S. pseudocapsicum. But these are generally also not considered to be taxonomically distinct today:[6]

Not to be confused with S. parvifolium.
Not to be confused with S. sendtnerianum.

See also

References

  1. "Medicinal and Poisonous Plants of Southern and Eastern Africa" - Watt & Brandwijk (E&S Livingstone, 1962)
  2. "Solanum pseudocapsicum". Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  3. D. G. Spoerke & S. C. Smolinske (1990). Toxicity of Houseplants. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press.
  4. "Plants and your cat". Cat Fanciers' Association. December 1997. Archived from the original on March 26, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2008.
  5. "Bird safety: poisonous and safe plants for birds". Peteducation.com. 1997. Retrieved September 29, 2008.
  6. 1 2 3 "Solanum pseudocapsicum". Solanaceae Source. July 2004. Retrieved September 29, 2008.
  7. Solanum pseudocapsicum at the Royal Horticultural Society website. Retrieved 26 September 2015
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