Solanum - African Holly, Aubergine, Bittersweet, Brinjal, ********* Cherry, Eggplant, Garden Huckleberry, Jerusalem Cherry, Melongene, Potato, Scarlet Eggplant, Sunberry, Tomato Eggplant, Wonderberry, Woody Nightshade
(Sola'num)

1 Answer

Answer :

DESCRIPTION: This is a large group of tender and hardy, herbaceous, shrubby, or climbing plants. They are found wild in many countries, but mainly in Costa Rica, Chile, tropical Africa and Europe. Several kinds are found in North America. Many are grown for decoration, but two are grown as vegetables. These vegetables are S. melongena variety esculentum, the Eggplant, and S. tuberosum, the Potato. The Solanums can be distinguished by their flowers, which are rotate (wheel-shaped), five petaled, white, purple, or blue, with five stamens set close together. The flowers grow in pendant clusters in the axils of the leaves. The different kinds will be described below.

Ornament - S. Wendlandii is a pretty climbing plant for a greenhouse that doesn't fall below 45 degrees in the winter. If develops a thick, woody stem that is clothed with large, shiny leaves. The leaves may be ovate, pinnate, or divided into five or more sections. The pale blue flowers grow 2˝ inches in diameter. S. Pseudo-Capsicum, the Jerusalem Cherry or ********* Cherry, is a very decorative potted plant for the home or greenhouse. It has dark green shoots and small, oblong leaves. It produces small, white flowers in the summer, which are followed by roundish scarlet or yellow berries, ˝- to 1-inch in diameter. S. Dulcamara, the Woody Nightshade or Bittersweet, is a dainty vine or semi-shrubby climber that may eventually grow to 8 feet. It has lavender-blue flowers followed by brilliant scarlet fruits. It foliage and fruit is poisonous, though, especially when wilted. S. nigrum's cultivated kinds are known as the Sunberry, Garden Huckleberry and Wonderberry. Some of the wild types are poisonous, especially the wilted foliage. The plant looks like a weed and isn't grown for ornament, but the garden forms are cultivated for their fruits, which are used in making pies. More kinds that are grown for ornament are mentioned below in the varieties section.

Eggplant (S. melongena esculentum) - This vegetable is also known as Brinjal, Melongene and Aubergine. This old Asian food has gained popularity in the U.S. because of the development of early-maturing varieties that produce fruit over a wider range of temperatures. Modern Eggplants form erect bushes with large, fuzzy leaves and stiff, hard stems. They usually grow 1˝ to 2 feet high, but some kinds adapted to the South can grow up to 3 or 4 feet. There are a variety of shapes and sizes, some being large, plump and ovoid to long and slender. Domestic varieties come in purple, purple-black or white and Asian varieties come in yellow, green and purplish red.

Garden Huckleberry - This tender annual grows 2˝ to 3 feet high. These robust, spreading plants are covered with large leaves and a profusion of white flowers. The flowers are followed by clusters of glossy, black berries, ˝ to e inch in diameter. This variety is different from S. Nigrum, the deadly nightshade, which should be avoided.

Potato (S. tuberosum) - This is a very popular vegetable and there are three main kinds sold in America. One kind is the mealy, dry tubers for baking, second, is the moist-fleshed white potatoes used for boiling and frying, and the third kind is the red-skinned "new potatoes" for boiling. White, russet and red are only a few of the colors and different flavors that are available. However, commercial growers are hesitant to offer potatoes with unusual characteristics such as yellow flesh or purple skin. At one time, more than 800 potato cultivars were grown in their ancestral home, the Andes. Potato plants grow 12 to 18 inches high and up to 4 feet wide. Some kinds produce flowers, which won't affect the tuber's growth. Small fruits that resemble little green tomatoes might follow the flowers, but do not eat these, because they are poisonous.


POTTING:

Ornament - They may be grown outdoors during the summer and brought in before frost kills them off, or they may be grown as annuals and raised new every year. They shouldn't have excessively dry or wet soil, because this will cause their leaves to fall and they will die. They should be grown in soil that has good drainage and consists of equal parts of peat, loam and leaf mold, with an addition of sand. The shoots should be trained to wires or trellis. Liquid fertilizer may be applied once in a while.

Eggplant - Transplants should be set in the garden 2 or 3 weeks after the frost-free date. Cold shock can kill them. Transplant in evening to make the transition easier. The plants should be set 2˝ feet apart and covered with bottomless plastic gallon jugs to protect from wind and cold. The jugs should be removed after 2 or 3 weeks. In most areas, Eggplants will benefit from black plastic mulch, but in the lower South and warm West, soil temperatures can rise too high under it. Verticillium wilt is a serious and widespread soil-borne disease. Some gardeners grow Eggplant in containers just to avoid it. Eggplants are ready to harvest when the fruits are half-grown and the skin is still shiny. Mature fruits have dull skin, the seeds turn dark and the flesh may be acrid. Use pruning shears or heavy kitchen scissors to snip off the tough stems. Wear cotton gloves if the stems, leaves, or caps of fruits are spiny.

Garden Huckleberry - Plant this as you would Tomatoes, preferably using black mulch, which makes it easier to collect ripe fruits that drop. Pick up all the fruits because they can be bothersome volunteers. When harvesting, pick only the ripe fruits, but don’t eat them raw. Cook them for use in pies or preserves, or mix them with dark-colored vegetables. The black juice will stain, so be careful.

Potato - Don't grow more than a dozen or so plants if you don't have dark, cool (40 degrees F.) storage area that is protected from freezing. About 4 months are needed from planting to harvest. So, if you have a small storage space and garden, consider faster-maturing vegetables. Potatoes need an acidic soil with a pH of 4.8 to 5.4; so, set aside a space in the garden for only them. Potatoes also need magnesium and calcium, but instead of using lime, use gypsum (calcium sulfate) and Epsom salts (for magnesium), which won't raise the pH. Adding 3 inches of sphagnum peat moss also helps. Straw mulch should be added under the vines as they grow to make sure the small tubers aren't exposed to the sun. Potatoes tend to set tubers near the surface and if the soil washes away and they are hit by sunlight, they will turn green and bitter. Another way to prevent this is by setting seed pieces on a deep layer of rotting straw or hay, covering them with more of the same and then ridging up the soil 2 or 3 inches deep to hold down the organic matter. Mulched tubers will grow large and are exceptionally smooth and easy to wash. Harvest your Potatoes by carefully digging, with a fork, the soil that is 2 feet from the center of the plant. Work your way in, sliding the tines under the tubers so they can be lifted without being punctured. After one pass through the bed, turn the soil over again to find more Potatoes. Don’t wash or bruise the tubers. Store them in a completely dark, cool place. If they start to sprout, rub off the eyes when peeling; sprouts shouldn’t be eaten.


PROPAGATION:

Ornament - These may be increased by seeds or cuttings. Seeds should be sown in well-drained pots or pans of finely sifted, sandy soil. Moisten the soil and set the containers where the temperature will not drop below 50 degrees. When the seedlings have two leaves, they are set 1˝ inches apart in a pan or box filled with light, rich soil. Water and shade from direct sunlight until they are established and then expose to full sunlight. When they're large enough, they are planted in 3-inch pots and a couple of weeks later, the tips of the main shoots are pinched off. When side shoots appear, they are repotted to larger pots and the tips of the side shoots are pinched off. They may eventually be set outside or remain inside. Cuttings may be made from 2-inch side shoots and inserted in sand and vermiculite.

Eggplant - Seeds need warm soil (temperature 70 to 80 degrees) and are usually started indoors, 8 to 10 weeks before the frost-free date. The baby plants need strong sunlight or fluorescent light in late winter. They aren't set out till a few weeks after the frost-free date.

Potato - These can be started from true seeds or pieces of tubers. Certified seed potato tubers are free of major diseases and can be ordered in early spring or bought at seed and feed stores. True seeds are becoming more and more popular. When you start from tubers, cut them into "seed pieces". These segments contain 2 or more eyes (buds) and a chunk or potato tissue to nourish the sprouts while they are forming roots. Each piece should weigh 2 to 3 ounces; if they are smaller, they usually start off slowly and sprouts from larger pieces or small whole tubers can revive if hit by light frost. Set the pieces 3 to 4 inches deep and half this depth if the soil is heavy clay. They should be a foot apart in rows that are 3 to 4 feet apart. Start as early as green peas as long as drainage is good as in sandy soil or in raised beds with compost rich soil. In areas with cool summers and a 5-month or more growing season, planting can be made in mid-spring. If commercial seed potatoes aren't available, you can use seed pieces from your own summer harvest as long as you air-dry and treat them with fungicide to reduce rotting. When they germinate, spread some straw over them, but not so much for mice to hide in it. Add more straw if a heavy freeze is predicted. If you are going to plant true seeds, start them indoors, 8 weeks before the frost-free date. The temperature should be 70 degrees. Transplant the seedlings to individual pots and set them out (after hardening off) when the weather is still cool, but after danger from frost has passed. If they are started too early or hardened off too much, they can begin setting tubers when they are too small to bear the burden.


VARIETIES:

Ornament - S. crispum; S. jasminoides (Potato Vine); S. Wendlandii; S. Pseudo-Capsicum (Jerusalem Cherry or ********* Cherry); S. Capsicastrum (False Jerusalem Cherry); S. aculeatissimum; S. integrifolium; S. Rantonnetii; S. Seaforthianum; S. Dulcamara (Bittersweet or Woody Nightshade); S. nigrum (Wonderberry or Sunberry); S. marginatum; S. aviculare (lacinatum); S. giganteum (African Holly); S. macranthum.

Eggplant - Oval fruits: Dusky, Beauty Hybrid, Florida Market (for the South), Early Beauty. Long fruits: Ichiban, Agora.

Garden Huckleberry - S. melanocerasum

Potato - Potatoes grown from tubers include the red varieties: Red Pontiac, Red LaSoda, Norland Red, Sangre. White varieties: Kennebec, White Cobbler, Katahdin, Russet Centennial. Those grown from seed include: Homestead Hybrid and Explorer.

Related questions

Description : Solanum melogena is locally known as : a. Tomato b. Potato c. Egg plant d. Chillie

Last Answer : Egg plant

Description : how do get rid of woody nightshade plants?

Last Answer : Go here it will explain how to get rid of nightshade http://www.ehow.com/how_8203614_rid-nightshade.html

Description : Before the European invader which vegetable was absent in India? (a) Potato and tomato (b) Shimla mirch and brinjal (c) Maize and chichinda (d) Bitter gourd

Last Answer : (a) Potato and tomato

Description : Among bitter gourd, mustard, brinjal, pumpkin, china rose, lupin, cucumber, sunhemp, gram, guava, bean, chilli, plum, Petunia, tomato, rose, Withania, potato, onion, Aloe and tulip how many plants have hypogynous flower? (a) Fifteen (b) Eighteen (c) Six (d) Ten

Last Answer : (a) Fifteen

Description : Family solanaceae consist of these crops. a. Potato, Tomato, eggplant etc. b. Water melon, muskmelon, cucumber c. Turnip, Raddish, Carrot etc. d. None of above

Last Answer : Potato, Tomato, eggplant etc

Description : What is eating the leaves of my Solanum Jasminoides (White Potato Vine)?

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : In the names Mangifera indica (mango), Solanum tuberosum (potato) and Panthera leo (lion), the terms Mangifera, Solanum and Panthera represent the higher level of? (1) Taxon (2) Taxonomic Hierarchy (3) Specific Epithet (4) Binomial Nomenclature

Last Answer : (1) Taxon Explanation: All the three names, indica, tuberosum and leo, represent the specific epithets while the first words Mangifera, Solanum and Panthera are genera and represents another higher level of taxon or category.

Description : When is the best time to transplant Jerusalem Cherry in Alabama

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : Jerusalem cherry poisoning?

Last Answer : DefinitionThe Jerusalem cherry is a plant that belongs to the same family as the deadly nightshade. It has small, round, red and orange fruit. ... but especially in the unripened fruit and leaves.SymptomsComaDeliriumDiarrheaDrowsinessEnlarged (dilated) pupilsHallucinationsHeadacheLow blood

Description : Aubergine curry recipe

Last Answer : Recipe ingredients 2 large aubergines, about 1 pound each 3 tablespoons oil 1/2 teaspoon black mustard seeds 1 bunch spring onions, finely chopped 4 ounces button mushrooms, halved 2 garlic cloves, crushed ... omit some of the oil, wrap the aubergines in foil and bake in the oven for 1 hour.

Description : A Vegetable containing sulphur is------? A. Potato B. Cabbage C. Brinjal D. Pumpkin

Last Answer : A. Potato

Description : Among China rose, mustard, brinjal, potato, guava, cucumber, onion and tulip, how many plants have superior ovary? (a) Three (b) Four (c) Five (d) Six

Last Answer : (d) Six

Description : Pusa Kesar is a variety of a. Caroot b. Onion c. Brinjal d. Potato

Last Answer : a. Caroot

Description : Consumption of which one of the following foods can prevent the kind of blindness associated with vitamin ‘A’ deficiency? (a) ‘Flavr Savr’ tomato (b) Canolla (c) Golden rice (d) Bt-Brinjal

Last Answer : (c) Golden rice

Description : The alternate host for pearl millet rust is a. Brinjal b. Tomato c. Mustard d. Okra

Last Answer : a. Brinjal

Description : Which of the following vegetable is directly seeded in field: a. Chillies b. Tomato c. Brinjal d. Peas

Last Answer : Peas

Description : Tomato, chillies and brinjal are grouped as a. Cole crops b. Fruit crops c. Solanaceous crops d. Summer crops

Last Answer : Solanaceous crops

Description : Which crop is most susceptible to viral infection : a. Chilies b. Tomato c. Onion d. Brinjal

Last Answer : Tomato

Description : ‘Chanchal’ is a variety of –1) Brinjal 2) Tomato 3) Chilli 4) Capcicum

Last Answer : 3) Chilli

Description : Phule keshari, Phule Raja are improved variety of — vegetable crop ? a. Onion b. Brinjal c. Tomato d. Pea

Last Answer : c. Tomato

Description : Which crop is grown as trap crop for nematode ? • Brinjal • Cabbage • Tomato • Onion

Last Answer : • Tomato

Description : Which crop is grown as trap crop for nematode ? a. Brinjal b. Cabbage c. Tomato d. Onion

Last Answer : c. Tomato

Description : Particle gun method of gene transformation was first used by Klein in — crop. a. Tomato b. Brinjal c. Onion d. Castor

Last Answer : c. Onion

Description : Pendimethalin is an effective treat ment for weed control in a). Brinjal, tomato, chillies etc b). Cabbage and cauliflower c). Onion and garlic d). All

Last Answer : d). All

Description : Eggplant-Mushrooms with Spicy Tomato Sauce

Last Answer : Eggplant-Mushrooms with Spicy Tomato Sauce - serves 2 1 medium eggplant, peeled and cubed 2 small zucchini, cubed 1 (8 ounce) package mushrooms, sliced 1 1/2 tbsp tomato paste 1/2 cup ... necessary if vegetables begin to stick; however, vegetables should be fairly dry, with slightly browned edges.

Description : Most nostalgic/bittersweet farewell you've had so far?

Last Answer : Nice question but it will choke me up to answer. I will skip out on this one.

Description : ____ chocolate is the most common form of eating chocolate. a. Milk c. Dark b. Bittersweet d. Sweet

Last Answer : a. Milk

Description : When the amount of chocolate liquor is greater than ____ percent, the product is bittersweet chocolate. a. 10 c. 20 b. 15 d. 35

Last Answer : d. 35

Description : do japanese eggplant need to be staked in the garden

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : What is the scientific name of wheat? a. Zea mays b. Solanum melongana c. Sorghum vulgare d. Triticum e. None of these

Last Answer : c. Sorghum vulgare

Description : Cymose inflorescence is present in (a) Solanum (b) Sesbania (c) Trifolium (d) Brassica.

Last Answer : (a) Solanum

Description : Which of the following causes itching and inflammation a). Ammannia baccifera b). Solanum nigrum c). Urtica sp d). Lantana camara

Last Answer : c). Urtica sp

Description : A weed having spines as adaptations that repel grazing a). Solanum nigrum b). Solanum xanthocarpus c). Parthenium d). Ageratum

Last Answer : b). Solanum xanthocarpus

Description : Cymose inflorescence is present in (1) Brassica (2) Solanum (3) Sesbania (4) Trifolium

Last Answer : (2) Solanum

Description : Should I trim off the yellow leaves on my cherry tomato plants

Last Answer : this has been a bad year for tomatoes in NE PA....we had way too much rain.......we also have yellow leaves on the very bottom.....I did trim some and not all.....I did clean the clippers before ... My family used to make tomatoe jam.....it tastes like cherry jam....also homemade catsup..........

Description : Can I save my cherry tomato plant that has tomatoes on it? It got overwatered and did not drain?

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : Is there a way to tell the difference between cherry tomato plants and big boy tomato plants?

Last Answer : Not sure.........but you will know in 6 to 8 weeks.

Description : Physalis - Alkekengi, Cape Gooseberry, Chinese Lantern Plant, Ground Cherry, Husk Tomato, Jamberry, Mexican Husk Tomato, Miltomate, Strawberry Tomato, Tomatillo, Winter Cherry (Phy'salis)

Last Answer : DESCRIPTION: This is a group of annuals and perennials, which are grown for their fruits and for decoration. They grow wild in Europe, America and Asia and belong to the Potato family, Solanaceae. ... ; Franchettii; Bunyardii; monstrosa; nana. Vegetable - P. peruviana; P. pruinosa; P. ixocarpa

Description : What natural member of the nightshade family is in the 10K mansion?

Last Answer : Welcome oh wildest of potatoes! It’s great to have your voice here. You’re intelligent and interesting, a pretty rare combination. Congratulations!

Description : name a nightshade tree

Last Answer : Anything in the nightshade family is poisonious........so if you have childrens or pets I would advise against this family.

Description : where to but nightshade plant

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : I believe I have deadly nightshade growing ove my fence, how is the best way to deal with tis toxic plant.

Last Answer : Need Answer

Description : What is used to make nightshade flowers ?

Last Answer : Flower garland is used to make garlands.

Description : Black nightshade poisoning?

Last Answer : DefinitionBlack nightshade poisoning occurs when someone eats pieces of the black nightshade plant.This is for information only and not for use in the treatment or ... DiarrheaStomach painVomitingHeart and blood Pulse - slow or rapidShockLungs Slowed breathingNervous system DeliriumFeverH

Description : Which of the family is also named as Nightshade family: a. Alliace b. Cucurbitaceae c. Solanaceae d. None of above

Last Answer : Solanaceae

Description : Basella - Indian Spinach, Malabar Nightshade, Malabar Spinach, Pasali, Pu-Tin-Choi (Basel'la)

Last Answer : DESCRIPTION: B. alba is known by many common names. These are Malabar Spinach, Indian Spinach, Malabar Nightshade, Pasali and Pu-tin-choi. Malabar Spinach is one of the best hot-weather greens ... VARIETIES: Usually sold generically, one cultivar, Rubri, has a reddish tint to the leaves and stems.

Description : Credible sources for Huckleberry Finn.

Last Answer : First of all, have you read the book? That is probably the most helpful thing you can do. And there is nothing wrong with Sparknotes. Personally I enjoy the idea of how our views of the book have changed over time. Here is a site with historical reviews of Huckleberry Finn that I find fascinating.

Description : what does huckleberry bush look like? I have several bush growing on my property and want to reconogize them.

Last Answer : Need Answer