Bush tomato
Bush tomatoes are the fruit or entire plants of certain nightshade species native to the more arid parts of Australia. While they are quite closely related to tomatoes, they might be even closer relatives of the eggplant, which they resemble in many details. There are 94 natives and 31 introduced species in Australia.
Bush tomato plants are small shrubs whose growth is encouraged by fire and disturbance.
The fruit of a number of species have been used as food sources by Aboriginal people in the drier areas of Australia.
A number of Solanum species contain significant levels of solanine and as such are highly poisonous. It is strongly recommended that people unfamiliar with the plant do not experiment with the different species, as differentiating between them can often be difficult.
Some of the edible species are:
- Solanum aviculare kangaroo apple
- Solanum centrale, also known as desert raisin, bush raisin or bush sultana, or by the native name kutjera
- Solanum chippendalei bush tomato, named after taxonomic botanist George Chippendale
- Solanum diversiflorum bush tomato, karlumbu, pilirta, wamurla
- Solanum ellipticum potato bush, very similar to Solanum quadriloculatum which is poisonous.
- Solanum laciniatum kangaroo apple.
- Solanum orbiculatum round-leaved solanum
- Solanum phlomoides wild tomato.
Solanum aviculare contains solasodine, a steroid used in the manufacture of oral contraceptives. Solanum plastisexum, a rare species first described in 2019, is distinguished among plants for exhibiting "breeding system fluidity" – that is, it has no stable sexual expression.