About Solanum quadriloculatum F.Muell.
Solanum quadriloculatum F.Muell. is an upright or spreading shrub that grows up to 0.5 m (1 ft 8 in) high. Its leaves are thick, grey-green or yellowish-green, densely covered in star-shaped hairs, and are occasionally rough and prickly. The leaves are elliptic to oval-shaped, measuring 5โ9 cm (2.0โ3.5 in) long and 1.5โ5 cm (0.59โ1.97 in) wide, with entire or slightly wavy margins, and grow from a 1โ4 cm (0.39โ1.57 in) long petiole. Purple flowers are borne in groups of 2 to 3, are 2โ2.5 cm (0.79โ0.98 in) wide, 5-lobed, 4โ6 mm (0.16โ0.24 in) long, mostly star-shaped, and grow from a 15โ20 mm (0.59โ0.79 in) long peduncle. Flowering occurs from early autumn through to spring, and the fruit is a brownish-yellow berry 10โ15 mm (0.39โ0.59 in) in diameter. This species, commonly called tomato bush, is distributed across New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, where it grows along disturbed roadways, on clay and loam soils, in seasonally flooded dry locations.