Paraguay Nightshade

Nightshades are plants in the Nightshade family (Solanaceae), especially those in the genus Solanum or those with similar-looking flowers. Most of them are poisonous if eaten, although potatoes and tomatoes are both nightshades that have some edible parts.

Paraguay Nightshade

Paraguay Nightshade (Lycianthes rantonnetii), also known locally as Blue Potato Bush, is a tender perennial shrub from the nightshade family that prefers partial to full sun and fairly consistently moist soil. This plant is related to potato, tomato, aubergine and deadly nightshade. With its bright evergreen foliage and vibrant blue-violet spring through summer papery blooms, Paraguay nightshade brings a lush tropical feel to Davis yards. This open, airy shrub grows to about 5 feet with long arching stems on which are borne abundant flowers. This plant propagates from semi-hardwood cuttings.

All parts of this plant are poisonous if ingested and dog owners should be alert to the following symptoms: hypersalivation, poor appetite, severe gastrointestinal upset, diarrhea, drowsiness, CNS depression, confusion, behavioral change, weakness, dilated pupils and slow heart rate. These symptoms will result from ingestion of potato, tomato or any other members of the nightshade family.

 

Native Plants

Blue Witch Nightshade (Solanum umbelliferum) in a garden in Woodland. Photo by queerbychoice.

Two nightshade species in the Solanum genus are native to Davis, and two others are native to other parts of Yolo County.

American Black Nightshade (Solanum americanum), alternatively known as White Nightshade, is a three- to four-foot-tall herbaceous annual or short-lived perennial that is native to all of Davis and all the low-lying flatlands of Yolo County. An occasional volunteer in Davis gardens, it produces white flowers and black fruit. It prefers full sun and significant moisture. It is commonly eaten or used medicinally in may countries, particularly in Africa and in various Pacific Islands, including among Indigenous Hawaiians.

Parish's Purple Nightshade (Solanum parishii) is a shrub that is native to the far western edge of Davis and the western two thirds of Woodland, as well as to the Dunnigan Hills, the Capay Hills, the Yolo County foothills, and the flatlands west of Davis and Woodland. It grows a little over three feet tall and up to five feet wide. It prefers full sun or partial shade and needs very little water. All parts of this plant, but especially the fruits, are poisonous to humans and to some other animals.

Chaparral Purple Nightshade (Solanum xanti) in a garden in Woodland. Photo by queerbychoice.

Blue Witch Nightshade (Solanum umbelliferum) is a shrub (occasionally slightly vining) that is native to the Dunnigan Hills, the Capay Hills, the Yolo County foothills, and some flatlands west of Woodland, including Esparto, Madison, and Monument Hills. It grows up to three feet tall and three feet wide but often stays less than half that size. It prefers full sun or partial shade and needs very little water. It goes summer-deciduous under drought stress but doesn't need much water to keep its leaves. All parts of this plant, but especially the fruits, are poisonous to humans and to some other animals.

Chaparral Purple Nightshade (Solanum xanti) is a semi-evergreen small vine or prostrate shrub that is native to the Yolo County foothills, including the the Capay Hills. It grows two to four feet long but does not achieve height without a support to climb up. All parts of this plant, but especially the fruits, are poisonous to humans and to some other animals.

Two other plants in other genera of the Nightshade family are native to Davis, and one is native to other parts of Yolo County.

Sacred Thorn-apple (Datura wrightii) in a garden in Woodland. Photo by queerbychoice.

Sharpleaf Ground-Cherry (Physalis acutifolia) is a three-foot-tall annual herb that has been documented twice in central Davis, once in 1962 and once 1994, barely a block apart. It's not otherwise considered to grow in the Davis area, but you might find it in the vicinity of Community Park. It also grows along the I-5 corridor at the far north end of Yolo County, often in disturbed soil. Its fully ripe fruits (ground-cherries) are edible raw or cooked.

Sacred Thorn-Apple (Datura wrightii) is a five-foot-tall and at least equally wide perennial herb that is native to all of Davis, often growing in dry, disturbed soil. From April to October each year, it produces luminous eight-inch white flowers (often edged with pale purple) that open at sunset and wither soon after next sunrise. These flowers are followed by round, spiky seedpods (thorn-apples) containing numerous seeds that germinate readily. Then it dies to the ground every winter. This plant is sometimes used as a hallucinogen and is quite dangerous when used that way, particularly because it gives users the impression that they are unimpaired even when nothing they see is actually real. Users are at high risk of being hit by cars due to suffering transitory blindness while under the belief that they still have normal vision.

Indian Tobacco (Nicotiana quadrivalvis) is a four- to seven-foot-tall annual herb that is native in and around Woodland and Knights Landing, as well as the northern third of West Sacramento, and also the Yolo County foothills, including the Capay Hills. It prefers full sun. Its flowers are usually white, sometimes pale yellowish green or pale purple. It is a source of nicotine, which functions as an insecticide to defend it against insects that eat it.

To learn about other plants which grow well in our Davis climate, visit our Town Flora.