Solanum nigrum
At first glance, the Black Nightshade looks like a small shrub. However, it only grows as an annual and does not survive the first frost. It shows its small white flowers from summer to winter. Depending on the location, it can grow up to 80 centimetres high.

Solanum nigrum colonises cultivated landscapes and can be found along roadsides, on building sites, in parks, gardens, on walls and stairs. It grows in sunny to semi-shady locations.
Black nightshade is native to all continents, but its original range is in Asia, Europe and North Africa (source).

Although the Black Nightshade contains solanine and other toxins, it seems to be eaten in some regions. For this, the leaves are cooked extensively. However, its unripe berries are considered highly poisonous and it should not be eaten in the form it is found in our country (source).




Categories: Berries | Wildflowers |

Apple-of-Peru
Arbutus unedo
Arum maculatum
Asparagus Fern
Barberry
Barberry (Frikart’s Barberry)
Berberis julianae
Bittersweet
Bittersweet, Bittersweet Nightshade
Black Nightshade
Blackberry
Blackberry (unripe)
Blackcurrant
Blueberry
Blueberry (Northern Highbush)
Bryony
Callicarpa giraldii
Caper
Castor Bean
Cherry Laurel
Common Lantana (berries)
Coralberry
Cornelian Cherry
Cotoneaster dammeri cv.
Cotoneaster, Many-flowered
Cotoneaster, Willow-Leaved
Crabapple (Malus “Red Sentinel”)
Cranberry
Crataegus pedicellata
Cyphostemma juttae
Daphne gnidium
Dogwood (White, Siberian) berries
Duranta erecta
Dwarf Umbrella Tree
Elder
Elder, Dwarf
Elder, red-berried; red elderberry
Euonymus fortunei cv.
Ficus rubiginosa
Firethorn
Gaultheria procumbens
Ginkgo
Glycyrrhiza echinata
Goji
Goldenrain-Tree
Hairy Nightshade
Hawthorn, Common
Heavenly Bamboo
Hippophaë rhamnoides
Holly
Honeysuckle, Fly or Dwarf or European Fly
Humulus lupulus
Ilex aquifolium
Ilex aquifolium “Variegata”
Italian Arum
Ivy
Japanese Aralia
Japanese Pachysandra
Japanese Pepper
Japanese Quince
Japanese Skimmia
Jostaberry
Kiwi Berry, Hardy Kiwifruit
Lagunaria patersonia
Laurustinus
Laurustinus (berries)
Leatherleaf Viburnum
Lily of the Valley
Lonicera nitida
Malus cv.
Malus cv.
Malus floribunda
Mistletoe
Myrtle (berries)
Nertera granadensis
Nighshade (hairy, leaf-fruited)
Olea europaea
Oregon Grape
Oregon Grape (hybrid)
Paulownia tomentosa
Physalis alkekengi
Physalis peruviana
Pistacia lentiscus
Pittosporum tobira
Pokeberry
Pokeberry (American)
Portugal Laurel
Potentilla indica
Prunus cerasifera
Prunus mahaleb
Prunus spinosa
Raspberry
Redcurrant
Rhamnus cathartica
Ribes uva-crispa
Rosa spinosissima
Rose Hip (Rosa rugosa)
Rose Hip (Rosa sp.)
Rowan
Rubus caesius
Rubus idaeus
Rubus laciniatus
Rubus phoenicolasius
Russian Olive
Salak, Snake Fruit
Sambucus racemosa
Sea-Buckthorn
Serviceberry
Solanum nigrum
Solanum pseudocapsicum
Spindle
Strawberry (Mock Strawberry, Indian Strawberry)
Swedish Whitebeam
Symphoricarpos albus
Symphoricarpos × doorenbosii
Thorn Apple
Thorn Apple, Common
Tutsan
Tutsan (Tall), St. John’s Wort
Viburnum opulus
Virginia Creeper
Vitis vinifera ssp. vinifera cv.
Wayfaring Tree
Whitecurrant
Wild Privet
Yew, English
Solanum sarrachoides
Atropa belladonna
Solanum villosum
Eggplant “Lucilla”
Datura innoxia