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More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of black nightshade for these uses.
There isn't enough information to know how black nightshade might work as a medicine.
Black nightshade has been reported as a weed in 61 countries and 37 crops.
Eastern black nightshade is not a strong competitor with most crops.
What captured his interest was a species of black nightshade that he could not readily identify.
People use the whole black nightshade plant including leaves, fruit, and root to make medicine.
There isn't enough information to know whether it is safe to apply black nightshade directly to the skin.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for black nightshade.
The leaves of Eastern black nightshade are triangular to elliptic.
Black nightshade can be a serious agricultural weed when it competes with crops.
Eastern black nightshade grows in landscapes, and mixed in among most crops.
The appropriate dose of black nightshade depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
It is part of the black nightshade group of Solanum species.
Black nightshade is a plant.
Black nightshade is cultivated as a food crop on several continents, including Africa and North America.
Eastern black nightshade is found principally in the Eastern United States.
Despite serious safety concerns, black nightshade has been used for stomach irritation, cramps, spasms, pain, and nervousness.
Black nightshade may refer to:
It can be confused with other black nightshade species in the Solanum nigrum complex.
"Morel" is the name of black nightshade, a poisonous weed related to one from which the drug belladonna is derived.
Other potential hosts of the disease include tomatoes and weeds such as Bittersweet and Black Nightshade.
Black nightshade is a fairly common herb or short-lived perennial shrub, found in many wooded areas, as well as disturbed habitats.
There are no easy chemical methods for controlling Eastern black nightshade, but night tillage reduces emergence by 50% to 75%.
Black Nightshade (1978)
You may hear black nightshade mistakenly referred to as "petty" morel, instead of the correct term, "petit" moral.
It can be confused with other black nightshade species in the Solanum nigrum complex.
The plant Black nightshade (Solanum nigrum), or its fruit.
The Solanum nigrum species is a highly variable taxon with many varieties and forms described.
There is a tendency in literature to incorrectly refer to many of the other "black nightshade" species as "Solanum nigrum".
Solanum nigrum (Purdue University)
Solanum nigrum (Black nightshade)
In fact one species of Solanum (Solanum nigrum) is known as the "sunberry".
Solanine was first isolated in 1820 from the berries of the European black nightshade (Solanum nigrum), after which it was named.
In 1753 Carl Linnaeus described six varieties of Solanum nigrum in Species Plantarum.
Sometimes Solanum nigrum is confused for deadly nightshade, Atropa belladonna, a different Solanaceae species altogether.
The toxicity of Solanum nigrum varies widely depending on the variety, and poisonous plant experts advise to avoid eating the berries unless they are a known edible strain.
Solanum lycocarpum - Solanum nigrum - Melissa officinalis - Datura suaveolens.
It is known from many solanaceous weeds, including Datura stramonium, Lycium chilense, and Solanum nigrum.
Origanum vulgare, Prunella vulgaris, Solanum nigrum and Urtica dioica are some of the more useful medicinal species found in the Alps.
It is the most intensively cultivated species for leaf cropping within the Solanum nigrum complex, and as such has undergone genetic selection by farmers for leaf size and other characteristics.
Edmonds, J. M. & J. A. Chweya, 1997: Black nightshades, Solanum nigrum L., and related species.
In addition to feeding on native species and on introduced weeds such as Solanum nigrum, it attacks cultivated plants such as Duboisia spp., egg plant, potato and tomato.
Oncom can be fried, made pepes or stir fried with vegetables such as Ulukutek Leunca (Solanum nigrum) or Oncom Peuteuy (green stink bean).
Some of the uses ascribed to Solanum nigrum in literature may actually apply to other black nightshade species within the same species complex, and proper species identification is essential for food and medicinal uses (See Taxonomy section).
Garden Nightshade, Houndsberry, Kakamachi, Kakmachi, Long Kui, Makoi, Morelle Noire, Petty Morel, Poisonberry, Solanum nigrum, Yerba Mora.
Another class of toxic substances found in this family are the glycoalkaloids, for example solanine which has occasionally been responsible for poisonings in people who ate berries from species such as Solanum nigrum or Solanum dulcamara, or green potatoes.
The Solanum nigrum complex - also known as Solanum L. section Solanum - is the group of black nightshade species; characterized by their lack of prickles and stellate hairs, their white flowers and their green or black fruits arranged in an umbelliform fashion.
Some of the major species within the Solanum nigrum complex are: Solanum nigrum, S. americanum, S. douglasii, S. opacum, S. ptychanthum, S.retroflexum, S. sarrachoides, S. scabrum, and S. villosum.
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