Confusing mugwort with wormwood is at the level of confusing potato with black nightshade because they share the genus Solanum. |
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For example, the poisonous plant deadly nightshade, also known as Belladonna, causes a throbbing headache, high temperature and bright red face. |
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As well as being a home to wildlife, it also has pockets of enchanted nightshade, yellow pimpernel and oak fern. |
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The purple berries of the pokeweed and the red berries of the European bittersweet, or nightshade, are common offenders. |
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They have been sampling the sites for seeds of hairy nightshade, shepherd's purse, burning nettles, and other common weeds. |
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Some nightshade plants are ingredients in potent narcotic medicine and sleeping pills. |
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The Europeans were not open to trying tomatoes, as a lot of members of the nightshade family are poisonous. |
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New to southern Florida's cypress domes is wetland nightshade, also known as aquatic soda apple. |
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Chiles are members of the nightshade family, and are the fruits of the plant Solanaceae Capsicum. |
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It is for control of black nightshade, pigweed, waterhemp, foxtail and crabgrass. |
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Stomach contents have also revealed apple seeds, fox grapes, nightshade berries, turtle-head seeds, partride berries, and elderberries. |
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Tomatoes are apart of the nightshade family, which include potatoes and eggplants. |
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As it is, the potato belongs to the botanical family, Solanacea, to which poisonous plants like the nightshade belong. |
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I could taste the smoke in my mouth and smell the nightshade growing up the embankment and feel my mum's hand on my arm. |
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Weed populations were dense and consisted of common lambsquarters, hairy nightshade, redroot pigweed, stinkgrass, and common purslane. |
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It is for control of black nightshade, kochia, lambs-quarters, pigweed, waterhemp, foxtail, and crabgrass. |
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He seemed agreeable enough, and there is something of the deadly nightshade about him. |
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Macrobiotics would eat cooked vegetables, but no fruit, and wouldn't touch deadly nightshade plants, such as tomatoes, peppers and aubergines. |
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A keen botanical eye might also have picked out pepperweed, yellow woodsorrel, soapwort, horseweed, ironweed, black nightshade, sheep sorrel, curly dock, and small eyebane. |
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All that in a happier field and a purer air would expand into virtue and germinate into usefulness, is thus converted into henbane and deadly nightshade. |
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Last year, over dinner, I mentioned that the stereotype of witches flying on broomsticks came about because they used to make a hallucinogenic poultice from deadly nightshade. |
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Velvet cactus, prickly pear, Bergerocactus emoryi, and cholla are widespread, often joined by box thorn, a prickly shrub in the nightshade family. |
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Hemlock, hellbane, fox glove, and nightshade as well as other dangerous and poisonous herbs rested in dried, fresh, and powdered form next to those very jars. |
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These so-called host plants include many broadleaf weeds and cover crops such as nettles, mallow, chicory, dandelion, thistles, bindweed, deadly nightshade, and many clovers. |
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Chewing insects can spread the disease from weeds as they feed, so be sure to remove all nearby pokeweed, nightshade, catnip, horsenettle and motherwort. |
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Experts recommend that tomatoes or any other member of the nightshade family not be planted in the same area any more often than once every four years. |
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They also contain small amounts of solanine, a toxic alkaloid found in potato leaves and other plants in the nightshade family. |
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The potato is a starchy, tuberous crop from the perennial nightshade Solanum tuberosum. |
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Eggplants belong to the nightshade family of vegetables, which also includes tomatoes, sweet peppers, and potatoes. |
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Today, deadly nightshade serves as the source of the pupil-dilating drug atropine. |
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The group will help pull Reed canary grass and nightshade from the Water Garden. |
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Field roses, lords and ladies and enchanter's nightshade are among the flowers found there. |
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Mayapple, bloodroot, pokeweed, nightshade and hellebore are other alkaloidal plants. |
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The berries of climbing nightshade are currently ripening and those of pokeweed will be soon. |
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Secondly, honey made from tansy ragwort, nightshade plants, the heath family, mountain laurel, and the Rhododendron and Azalea families can be toxic. |
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Black nightshade is an annual plant, two-feet high, with many branches. |
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Woodlands and wetlands keep their avens, enchanter's nightshade, lopseed, leafcup, touch-me-not, wood nettle, Joe Pye weed, monkey flower, and tall bell flower. |
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Before fog leaves the scrub-oak Or the grasses of the downland, Take dragonwort under the black alder, Take cockspur grass and henbane, The belladonna, the deadly nightshade. |
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A member of the deadly nightshade family, tomatoes were erroneously thought to be poisonous by Europeans who were suspicious of their bright, shiny fruit. |
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Enchanter's nightshade season joins honewort season in the dark woods. |
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The plant belongs to the nightshade family, which is called Solanaceae. |
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