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Solanum Pseudocapsicum Click on Images to Enlarge Species information Abo ut Reso urces Hom e A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Solanum pseudocapsicum Click on images to enlarge Family Solanaceae Scientific Name Solanum pseudocapsicum L. Fruit and flower. Copyright Australian Plant Image Index Linnaeus, C. von (1753) Species Plantarum 2: 184. Type: Madeira; holo: LINN 248.4. Fide W. G. DArcy, Ann. (APII). Photographer: M. Fagg. Missouri Bot. Gard. 60: 714 (1973). Common name False Capsicum; Nightshade; Jerusalem Cherry; Cherry, Madeira Winter; Cherry, Jerusalem; Capsicum, False; Madeira Winter Cherry Weed * Stem Scale bar 10mm. Copyright CSIRO Usually flowers and fruits as a shrub about 1 m tall but also flowers when smaller. Leaves Plant unarmed, twigs, petioles and leaves glabrous. Leaf blades about 4-10 x 1-3 cm, petioles about 0.2-1.5 cm long. Lateral veins forming loops inside the blade margin. Flowers Inflorescence short, 1-several-flowered. Pedicels about 1 cm long. Calyx about 4-5 mm long, lobes about 2-3 mm long. Corolla about 10-15 mm diam. Anthers orange. Pollen white. Ovary and style pale green, glabrous, ovules numerous. 10th leaf stage. Copyright CSIRO Fruit Fruits globular, about 10-15 mm diam., calyx lobes persistent at the base. Seeds about 3-4 mm long. Embryo +/- coiled, cotyledons no wider than the radicle. Seedlings Cotyledons +/- linear, about 12-15 x 4-5 mm. First pair of leaves alternate, almost rhomboid, petioles quite long. At the tenth leaf stage: stem clothed in short, pale, 2-branched hairs with each branch recurved. Petiole and leaf blade +/- glabrous. Leaves emit an obnoxious odour when crushed. Petiole winged or the leaf blade decurrent. Seed germination time 10 days. Cotyledon stage, epigeal germination. Copyright CSIRO Distribution and Ecology An introduced species of uncertain origin, now naturalised in NEQ and various places to the south including south-eastern Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and southern Western Australia. Altitudinal range in NEQ from 650-800 m. Usually grows on farmland but also found on rain forest margins and in disturbed areas in rain forest. Natural History & Notes Field evidence of toxicity is rather vague and contradictory. Everist (1974). All plant parts poisonous. Austin, D. F. 1998. Poisonous Plants of Southern Florida. Poisonous to pets. Herb (herbaceous or woody, under 1 m tall) X Shrub (woody or herbaceous, 1-6 m tall) X RFK Code 3221 CC-BY Australian Tropical Herbarium unless otherwise indicated in the images..
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