Solanum paniculatum

Solanum paniculatum, commonly known as jurubeba, is a nightshade common in almost all of Brazil. It is used as a medicinal plant and has a bitter taste.

Solanum paniculatum
Jurubeba
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae
Genus: Solanum
Species:
S. paniculatum
Binomial name
Solanum paniculatum
Synonyms

See text

An infusion of its stem and its root in sugar cane alcohol (cachaça) is popularly used as an apéritif or a digestif.

Synonyms

Well known in its native range, this species has been described time and again under different now-invalid names. Some of these are homonyms of other Solanum taxa.[1]

  • Solanum belfort Vand.
  • Solanum belfortianum Dunal
  • Solanum botelhianum Dunal (unjustified emendation)
  • Solanum botelho Vand.
  • Solanum chloroleucum Dunal
  • Solanum dictyoticum Roem. & Schult.
  • Solanum jubeba Vell.
  • Solanum macronema Sendtn.
  • Solanum manoelii Moric.
  • Solanum reticulatum Willd. ex Roem. & Schult.
Solanum reticulatum of de Jussieu from Dunal in de Candolle is S. vellozianum.
Solanum reticulatum of Dunal in Poiret is S. crotonoides as described by Lamarck
  • Solanum rothelianum Steud. (lapsus)

Two varieties were once recognized, but they are not generally considered valid anymore:[1]

  • Solanum paniculatum var. ellipticum Chodat
Not to be confused with S. ellipticum, described by Brown. The S. ellipticum of de Conceição Vellozo refers to S. cylindricum.
  • Solanum paniculatum var. integrifolium Dunal
Not to be confused with the S. integrifolium of Poiret, which refers to S. aethiopicum

Similar nightshade species that were once included with S. paniculatum but are now considered distinct are:[1]

  • Solanum pseudoauriculatum (as f. flavescens or ssp. pseudoauriculatum)
  • Solanum acutilobum (as var. acutilobum)
  • Solanum albidum Dunal (as var. chulumani)
gollark: I think there are significantly larger issues than climate change going on anyway. Such as, how do you make governance actually work well? If you can solve that many of the other things follow.
gollark: I mean, if it's profitable it would happen, but it doesn't seem to be since renewables are pushed harder and there's tons of bad nuclear regulation.
gollark: Overpopulation seems very overrated as a problem.
gollark: It's annoying about how I regularly read about exciting new battery tech which never seems to go anywhere.
gollark: Why do you need batteries for nuclear power/mining of uranium?

References

  1. Solanaceae Source (2008)

Footnotes

  • Solanaceae Source (2008): Solanum paniculatum. Version of February 2008. Retrieved 2008-SEP-25.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.