Gardening
Perennials
By
Updated on 09/11/24
Reviewed by
Mary Marlowe Leverette
Reviewed byMary Marlowe Leverette
Mary Marlowe Leverette is one of the industry's most highly-regarded housekeeping and fabric care experts, sharing her knowledge on efficient housekeeping, laundry, and textile conservation. She is also a Master Gardener with over 40+ years of experience and 20+ years of writing experience. Mary is also a member of The Spruce Gardening and Plant Care Review Board.
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In This Article
Toxicity
Appearance
Location
Removal
Prevention
Deadly Nightshade vs. Twinberry Honeysuckle
FAQ
Belladonna, also known as deadly nightshade, is extremely toxic to humans, cats, dogs, and horses. It should never be planted in your yard. Belladonna is a medium-sized shrub with dark green leaves, distinct purple bell-shaped flowers, and shiny black berries.
It grows natively in Eurasia and has naturalized all over the world. Bees produce honey from belladonna flower nectar, which is toxic for humans to consume.
Common Name: | Belladonna, deadly nightshade, devil's cherry, black nightshade, European bittersweet, climbing nightshade |
Botanical Name: | Atropa belladonna |
Family: | Solanaceae |
Plant Type: | Herbaceous, perennial |
Mature Size: | 3-4 ft. tall and wide |
Sun Exposure: | Full, partial |
Soil Type: | Loamy, sandy, well-drained |
Soil pH: | Neutral, acidic, alkaline |
Bloom Time: | Summer, fall |
Flower Color: | Purple, green |
Hardiness Zones: | 5-9 (USDA) |
Native Area: | Europe, Asia |
Toxicity: | Toxic to people, pets |
Deadly Nightshade Toxicity
All parts of belladonna—leaves, flowers, fruits, and roots—are highly toxic to humans and domesticated animals if consumed. The sweet, purplish-black berries attract children and are the greatest risk.
Deadly nightshade affects the nervous system, causing hallucinations, and can be fatal.
Birds and other wildlife seem immune to its effects. For example, the honeybees that make honey with belladonna nectar that is toxic for human consumption. The toxic ingredients in belladonna include atropine, hyoscyamine, and scopolamine.
What Does Deadly Nightshade Look Like?
- Size: Belladonna is a tall, bushy, upright perennial of the nightshade family that returns yearly. It grows 3 to 4 feet high and wide.
- Leaves: Dark green leaves are oval and unevenly sized, ranging from 3 to 10 inches long; leaves on the lower plant are solitary; on the upper plant, they grow in pairs.
- Flowers: Flowers are mildly scented, dull purple or lavender with a green tinge, and are distinctly bell-shaped, blooming from June through September; flowers are located in the leaf axils, the angle between theleafand the upper part of the stem.
- Fruit: The fruit, often called the devil's cherry, ripens between late August and September and is black and shiny like a cherry. The berries are not evenly sized and can reach about 3/4 of an inch in size. Due to their slight resemblance with wild edible berries, the purplish-black, sweet-tasting fruit of belladonna poses a particular risk of being ingested.
Where Is Deadly Nightshade Found?
Belladonna is native to Eurasia from England throughout central and southern Europe, and North Africa to Iran. Belladonna has been found in several states in the United States, including New York, Michigan, California, Oregon, and Washington.
It often grows in wastelands and areas with disturbed soil, such as dumps, quarries, and roadsides.
How to Remove Deadly Nightshade
If you have positively identified belladonna in your yard, take all the necessary precautions to avoid skin contact. Wear long sleeves, long pants, boots, and gloves. If the plant is tall and there is the slightest risk that your face will have contact with the plant, also wear goggles or a full-facerespirator.
- Dig out the plant with all its roots. Be thorough because belladonna regrows from any roots left in the soil.
- Safely dispose of the entire plant, including its roots, in the trash.
- Disinfect the tools you have been using for removing the plant—shovel, pruners—with a chlorine bleach solution (1 cup chlorine bleach per 1-gallon water). When cleaning the tools, wear waterproof gloves and dispose of the solution properly.
- Wash your work clothes immediately and separately from other clothing.
If belladonna starts to regrow from residual roots, the most efficient chemical to use is a non-selective herbicide such as glyphosate. Make sure to apply the herbicide when the shoots are still tiny to minimize the use of herbicide and kill the plant before it can spread again.
How to Prevent Belladonna From Spreading
Belladonna spreads rapidly like a weed. The plant dies back during the winter and regrows in the spring from its thick, fleshy roots. Birds that eat the seeds without ill effects spread the plant to other locations in their droppings.
Deadly Nightshade vs. Twinberry Honeysuckle
Twinberry honeysuckle (Lonicera involucrata) is often confused for belladonna because the blackened berries from this shrub look very similar. However, as its common name suggests, twinberry honeysuckle produces a pair of two berries together.
Belladonna produces single berries. Also, the berries of the honeysuckle variety are smaller, and it has red leaves from the spot where the berries emerge.
Twinberry honeysuckle flowers look similar to belladonna's but are yellow—another dead giveaway that the plant is not belladonna—which has dark purple blooms.
FAQ
What is belladonna used for?
Some believe belladonna has various homeopathic benefits, but little scientific evidence supports these claims.
Is it legal to grow belladonna in the U.S.?
Belladonna is legal to grow, buy, and sell in the United States. One U.S. prescription drug contains belladonna. The FDA bans the use of belladonna in over-the-counter products.
Where does belladonna get its name?
The species name, "Atropa," comes from Atropos, the Greek goddess who holds the shears to cut the thread of life as one of the three goddesses of fate and destiny."Belladonna" comes from the Italian words "beautiful woman." It is suggested that ladies during the Renaissance used eye drops made of belladonna to dilate their pupils, a sign of beauty at the time.
Why is belladonna called deadly nightshade?
Belladonna is extremely deadly when ingested and is also a member of the nightshade family, Solanaceae.
The Spruce uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Deadly nightshade. ASPCA.
Atropa bella-donna. North Carolina State Extension.
The powerful solanaceae: Belladonna. United States Forest Service.
Atropa belladonna L. Global Biodiversity Information Facility.
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