Physalis nicandroides


Physalis nicandroides, one of numerous species generally referred to as husk tomatoes, ground tomatoes, or tomatillos, is a species of flowering plant belonging to the family Solanaceae.

Description

Physalis nicandroides is an erect, branched, annual, herbaceous plant standing up to tall. It bears hairs, some of which are glandular, lending the plant a musky odor. Its leaf blades are broadly egg-shaped to heart-shaped, up to long and wide. Leaf tips are pointed, and the two sides of blade bases may be unlike and often don't meet. Margins are variously toothed to smooth.
Single flowers arise from stems on somewhat descending peduncles up to long. Bell-shaped corollas up to wide are creamy whitish with five conspicuous greenish spots at their throats. Pollen-producing anthers rising from the throat are strikingly blue to blue-green. When the corolla falls off leaving the developing fruits, the peduncles thicken and elongate up to. As the flower's ovary grows and matures, the calyx enlarges and inflates to completely enclose the resulting berry-type fruit suggesting a Chinese lantern. The fruiting calyx is strongly 5-angled, up to wide, and turns golden brown and leathery after drying. The berry inside it is dark brown, up to in diameter, and contains numerous seeds.

Distribution

The iNaturalist map registering observations of Physalis nicandroides indicate that the species occurs in most of Mexico south through Central America into most of Costa Rica. It has been introduced into Paraguay.

Habitat

In Mexico, Physalis nicandroides is a common weed along roads or near crop fields, at elevations of 120-2000m. In the state of Guerrero it is reported also as occurring in moist ravines.

Human uses

As food

Combined with other ingredients like onion, garlic, cilantro and chili pepper, Physalis nicandroides fruits are used for making salsas. However, Physalis nicandroides fruits contain tannins which taste a little bitter and that keeps some people from using them, though others like it.

As medicine

In Mexico, gargling a decoction from boiling the root of Physalis nicandroides is used for the pain caused by infected molars. In the state of Guerrero, Physalis nicandroides is used to reduce symptoms of edemas. In Puebla the leaves are used against conjunctivitis. In the states of Morelos and Guerrero, mothers who have just given birth are bathed in water prepared from the species.
Studies indicate that a certain steroid from Physalis nicandroides inhibits HIV transcription, thus might help in the treatment of HIV/AIDS.

For trapping small insects

In the Mexican state of Guerrero, the sticky leaves of Physalis nicandroides, because of their sticky, gland-bearing hairs, are strewn on the floor, or even woven into palm-leaf-based floor mats called petates, to immobilize tiny insect pests, particularly fleas. In fact, in Mexico Physalis nicandroides often is called matapulgas, meaning "flea killer".

Ceremonial

In southern Mexico, dry Physalis nicandroides plants have been observed used as part of Christmas decorations.

[Phytochemistry]

In species of Physalis the most frequently occurring chemical constituents are naturally occurring steroids known as withanolides. These occur as secondary metabolites. In Physalis nicandroides, other constituents reported are sucrose esters and labdane diterpenoid.

[Phylogeny]

employing Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood grouped Physalis nicandroides with P. peruviana, P. longifolia, P. glutinosa and P. caudella, all in the Withaninae, one of three subtribes which were recognized.

[Etymology]

The genus name Physalis is a New Latin modification of the Late Greek physallis, from meaning "bladder, bubble", in reference to the inflated calyx surrounding the mature fruit.
In the species name nicandroides, the nicandr- refers to the genus Nicandra, closely related to Physalis species. The -oides is a word-forming element from Latinized Ancient Greek meaning "like, like that of": thus "like Nicandra."