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Solanaceae FAMILY

Physalis pumila

Physalis pumila

Edibility
2/5
Medicinal
0/5

Safety & Hazards

The unripe fruits and foliage of Physalis species contain solanine and other solanidine alkaloids and are toxic if ingested in large quantities. The ripe fruiys are usually edible, and several species are cultivated for these fruits[ 270 Title Flora of N. America Publication Author Website http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/fna/ Publisher Year 0 ISBN Description An on-line version of the flora with an excellent description of the plant including a brief mention of plant uses. ].

Botanical Description

Physalis pumila is an erect to recumbent, herbaceous perennial plant growing from a deeply buried, stout, rhizomatous rootstock; it can grow around 15 - 40cm tall[ 270 Title Flora of N. America Publication Author Website http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/fna/ Publisher Year 0 ISBN Description An on-line version of the flora with an excellent description of the plant including a brief mention of plant uses. ]. The plant is harvested from the wild for local use as a food.

Habitat & Origin

Origintemperate
Native RangeCentral and eastern N. America - Washington, Montana and Minnesota, south to Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Louisiana
HabitatDry, rocky soil, prairies, fields, disturbed habitats; at elevations from 100 - 600 metres[ 270 Title Flora of N. America Publication Author Website http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/fna/ Publisher Year 0 ISBN Description An on-line version of the flora with an excellent description of the plant including a brief mention of plant uses. ]. (var pumila) Sandhills, dunes, sandy floodplains, sandy prairies and roadsides; at elevations from 500 - 2,000 metres[ 270 Title Flora of N. America Publication Author Website http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/fna/ Publisher Year 0 ISBN Description An on-line version of the flora with an excellent description of the plant including a brief mention of plant uses. ]. (var hispida)