Climbing or scrambling vines, woody, unarmed, to ca. 3 m, glabrous or sparsely pubescent, hairs white, unbranched, ca. 0.2 mm. Leaves petiolate; peti­oles twining around sup­ports, 1–4 cm; blade simple to compound, elliptic to broadly ovate, (2–)3.5–10(–13) × (1–)2–9(–11) cm, margins entire to divided with up to 4 pairs of leaflets, leaflet margins entire, base truncate or slightly cordate. Inflorescences terminal, becoming lat­eral, extra-axillary, much-branched, to 100+-flowered, to 25+ cm. Pedicels inserted into small sleeve on inflorescence axis, 0.8–1.4 cm in flower and fruit. Flowers radially symmetric; calyx not accrescent, unarmed, ca. 0.5 mm, nearly truncate, glabrous or sparsely pubescent on lobe tips; corolla purple, stellate, 1–2.5 cm diam., with sparse interpetalar tissue; stamens unequal due to unequal filaments; anthers ellipsoidal, 2–3 mm, dehiscent by terminal pores; ovary glabrous. Berries bright shiny red, globose, 0.8–1.5 cm diam., glabrous, without sclerotic granules. Seeds pale yel­lowish tan, flattened, 4–4.5 × 2.5-3 mm, minutely pitted. 2n = 24.


Phenology: Flowering year-round.
Habitat: Disturbed sites.
Elevation: 0–200 m.

Distribution

Introduced; Fla., Mexico, West Indies, Central America (Belize, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama), South America (Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela), introduced also elsewhere in South America (Argentina, Paraguay, Peru), Asia, Africa, Pacific Islands, Australia.

Discussion

Solanum seaforthianum is widely cultivated as an ornamental and sporadically escapes in Florida. A simi­lar species with twining petioles, S. laxum Sprengel, is occasionally cultivated in California. It is distinguished from S. seaforthianum by having tufts of hairs in the vein axils of the abaxial leaf surfaces, white rather than violet corollas, and equal stamens.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Solanum seaforthianum"
Lynn Bohs1 +  and 1The author wishes to acknowledge co-authorship with David M. Spooner† on S. jamesii and S. stoloniferum and with Sandra Knapp and Tiina Särkinen on the black nightshade species. +
Andrews +
Brazilian nightshade +
Fla. +, Mexico +, West Indies +, Central America (Belize +, Costa Rica +, Guatemala +, Honduras +, Nicaragua +, Panama) +, South America (Brazil +, Colombia +, Ecuador +, Venezuela) +, introduced also elsewhere in South America (Argentina +, Paraguay +, Peru) +, Asia +, Africa +, Pacific Islands +  and Australia. +
0–200 m. +
Disturbed sites. +
Flowering year-round. +
Bot. Repos. +
Introduced +
Lycopersicon +
Solanum seaforthianum +
species +