[
. — Since the publication in
The Leader
of an engraving of this plant
several communications have appeared describing this British annual nightshade as
not dangerous.
It may be well, therefore, the Government Botanist begs us, to point out that when
Desfosse, in 1820, discovered the Solanin,
it was prepared from the berry of this plant, but he found this alkaloid subsequently
also in the leaves of other species. This Solanum had already been known to Theophrastos
more than 2000 years ago to be narcotic, and he gave it the ominous name
, under which it occurs in the works by Dioscorides and other ancient physicians,
who used the plant medicinally. Baron Von Mueller has for many years been aware that
the berries have been eaten without ill effects,
but asks how many by any person at any one time? They are so small that a dozen of
them only equals a good sized gooseberry. In cases again where the foliage may have
been used as a kitchen vegetable it may be assumed that the poisonous principle has
been removed in the boiling water. In the case of pasture animals, however, they would
feed on the herb in its raw state, and no wonder therefore that fatal results should
take place, especially if the animals browsed on the plant extensively in autumn when
the pastures are bare. The fatal cases reported recently are not the only instances
of deaths among herds and flocks, many others having quite lately come under the Government
Botanist's notice. It is very likely, that officer remarks, that the deleterious particles
in this plant may be at times hardly developed. A professional gentleman, holding
a public position in a neighboring colony, announced officially some years ago, that
he had fed pasture animals without bad results on even the
from which in our interior regions so many animals succumb. The bitter almond and
the sweet are varieties of the same tree. For expert mental
purposes sheep have been fed on the gastrolobium bilobum, one of the worst of the
poison shrubs of West Australia, the foliage at one period of the year producing no
ill effect. In his work on select plants Baron Von Mueller gives those species of
Solanum of which the berries are always free of danger as esculents.
The four chemical elements, which form the alkaloids, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen,
and oxygen, unlike those of mineral poisons, are always present, and in their varied
proportions do not get always developed in the same process. Nevertheless we should
be extremely cautious, so far as poison plants ago concerned, to declare them innocuous.
In the case of the two little children who ate the berries of the English nightshade,
it was needful for a medical practitioner to watch them for some time before so tender
beings could be declared out of danger.
The
seems nowhere yet naturalised, and the Government Botanist has discouraged the culture
of this plant and of the Hemlock, Henbane and some other very powerful medicinal plants
to guard against their becoming spontaneous here. Sir James Smith, a leading physician
of his time, remarks in his English flora that merely "a grain or two of the dried
leaf has sometimes been given to promote various secretions, possibly by exciting
a great and rather dangerous agitation in the viscera."
Professor Husemann, a leading therapeutist of the present day, observes
that Solanin, which is particularly abundant in potato shoots, is a deadly poison
to domestic animals, even in very small doses, as ascertained by his special experiments.]