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Shrub

Kangaroo Apple Flower

Solanum laciniatum Forst.f. (and S. aviculare)

Kangaroo ApplePoroporoBullibulliNew Zealand Nightshade

Kangaroo apple produces striking purple-blue star-shaped flowers with bright yellow anthers, followed by orange-red egg-shaped fruits. Native to Australia and New Zealand, these bold blooms symbolize adaptation, pioneering spirit, and the resilience of disturbed landscapes.

Plant Family

Solanaceae (Nightshade family)

Blooming

Spring to fall (August-October in Southern Hemisphere; continuous in warm climates)

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Purple-blue star-shaped kangaroo apple flowers with bright yellow anthers
Purple-blue star-shaped kangaroo apple flowers with bright yellow anthers

Symbolism & Meanings

Key Meanings

Adaptation
Pioneering spirit
Resilience
Quick recovery
Transformation
Natural regeneration

Perfect For

Restoration projectsPioneer garden plantingsNative plant celebrationsWildlife habitat creation

Color Meanings

Purple-blue:Adaptability and pioneering strength
Yellow anthers:Hope and new growth
Orange-red fruit:Maturity and nourishment

Similar flowers: anacycluss and monsteras also share similar meanings.

Cultural Significance

Kangaroo apple represents the resilient pioneer species that colonize disturbed lands after fires or clearing. The common name refers to the kangaroo paw-print shape of the deeply lobed juvenile leaves. Indigenous peoples valued the plant for food (ripe fruit) and medicine. During the 1960s-70s, it gained commercial importance when Soviet and European researchers discovered its leaves contained valuable steroid compounds for contraceptive production. The plant exemplifies nature's ability to heal damaged landscapes.
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Botanical Information

Physical Characteristics

Flower Size: 1-1.5 inches diameter (25-40 mm), five-petaled star shape
Plant Size: 3-13 feet tall (1-4 meters), typically 6-8 feet in cultivation
Flower Shape: Five-pointed star with prominent yellow anthers forming cone in center

Natural Habitat

Native to: Eastern Australia (Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales), New Zealand, Stewart Island, Chatham Islands
Habitat: Disturbed areas, roadsides, forest edges, gullies, riversides, coastal to montane zones
Climate: Temperate, Coastal, Warm temperate

Growing Guide

Sunlight

Full sun to partial shade for best flowering and fruit production

Water

Moderate; tolerates various moisture levels from moist to moderately dry

Soil

Well-drained, Sandy, Loamy, Clay, Average to poor, Slightly acidic to neutral (pH 6.0-7.5)

Expert Growing Tips

1

Hardy in zone 9, grow as annual or container plant elsewhere

2

Fast-growing but short-lived (5-6 years)

3

Easy to propagate from seeds or semi-hardwood cuttings

4

Produces two types of foliage: deeply lobed juvenile and entire adult leaves

5

Requires no pre-treatment for seed germination

6

Prune early to prevent splitting at base

7

Caution: Unripe fruit and leaves contain toxic alkaloid solasodine

8

Only eat fruit when fully orange and ripe

Uses & Benefits

Ornamental Uses

  • Quick-growing screen plant
  • Architectural foliage display
  • Container gardening in cold climates
  • Wildlife and bird gardens
  • Erosion control and bank stabilization
  • Temperate greenhouse specimens

Traditional Uses

  • Young foliage contains steroids used to manufacture contraceptives
  • Cultivated commercially for pharmaceutical steroid extraction
  • Studied extensively in USSR, New Zealand, India, and Egypt
  • Leaves and unripe fruit contain solasodine
  • Used in traditional Maori medicine
  • CRITICAL: Only ripe orange fruit is edible; green fruit is toxic

Disclaimer: Information provided is for educational purposes only. Consult healthcare professionals before using any plant medicinally.

Frequently Asked Questions about the Kangaroo Apple Flower

are kangaroo apple fruits edible

Yes, but only when fully ripe and orange. Unripe green fruits are toxic and can cause serious illness. The ripe fruit tastes sweet but should split naturally before eating.

is kangaroo apple invasive

Kangaroo apple can be invasive in some regions outside its native range, particularly in parts of California and tropical areas where it self-seeds freely.

how do you tell kangaroo apple from other solanum species

Kangaroo apple has deeply lobed juvenile leaves and lance-shaped adult leaves, purple-blue five-petaled flowers, and orange-red egg-shaped fruits about 10-15mm wide.

why do kangaroo apple leaves change shape

Kangaroo apple exhibits heterophylly - producing two distinct leaf types. Juvenile plants have deeply lobed leaves while mature plants produce narrow, entire leaves.

how long do kangaroo apple plants live

Kangaroo apple shrubs are relatively short-lived, typically surviving 5-6 years in good conditions. They're fast-growing pioneer species designed for quick colonization.

Available Colors

Purple
Blue-violet
Dark purple
White (rare)

Quick Facts

Type:shrub
Family:Solanaceae (Nightshade family)
Native to:Eastern Australia (Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales)
Blooms:Spring to fall (August-October in Southern Hemisphere; continuous in warm climates)

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