Brazilian nightshade

Solanum seaforthianum

Solanum seaforthianum, the Brazilian nightshade, is a flowering evergreen vine of the family Solanaceae native to tropical South America. As a member of the Solanum genus, it is related to such plants as the tomato and potato.
Brazilian nightshade - Solanum seaforthianum ( ripe berries which are eaten by birds) Growing on garden fence. Australia,Geotagged,Solanum seaforthianum,Summer

Appearance

It is characterized by clusters of four to seven leaves and can climb to a height of 6 m given enough room. It blooms in the mid to late summer with clusters of star-shaped purple inflorescence followed by scarlet marble-sized berries. The plant is highly heat resistant, but cannot tolerate frost conditions. The plant contains modest amounts of various tropane alkaloids such as atropine, scopolamine and hyoscyamine and should be considered mildly toxic and inedible.
Brazilian nightshade flowers - Solanum seaforthianum  Australia,Geotagged,Solanum seaforthianum,Summer

Cultural

The species has become widely naturalised outside its native range and is an invasive species in Australia, Africa, Indochina, the Pacific Islands and India, choking native vegetation and poisoning livestock.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderSolanales
FamilySolanaceae
GenusSolanum
SpeciesS. seaforthianum
Photographed in
Australia