Crop details
African nightshade
Categories
Quick stats
| Family | Solanaceae |
|---|---|
| Typical harvest | 12.5 t/ha |
| Varieties | 3 |
| Pests & diseases | 9 |
| Seasons | 5 |
Crop profile
| Growth habit | annual |
|---|---|
| Days to harvest | 60–120 |
| Main uses | Leafy vegetable; medicinal; cooked greens |
| Pollination | self |
| Origin / where it grows | Sub-Saharan Africa; cultivated across East Africa |
Weather, soil & spacing
| Best temperature | 18–28 °C |
|---|---|
| Rainfall | 600–1200 mm/yr |
| Altitude | 0–2400 m |
| Best pH | 5.5–6.8 |
| Soil type | Well-drained loam with high organic matter |
| Row spacing | 30 cm |
| Plant spacing | 20 cm |
| Planting depth | 0.5 cm |
| Seed rate | 2 kg/ha |
| Nursery days | 25 |
Simple notes for farmers
About the crop: This crop is annual. You plant, grow and harvest it in one main season, then plant again. You can normally start harvesting about 60–120 days after planting, depending on care and variety.
Main use: Farmers mostly grow this crop for leafy vegetable; medicinal; cooked greens.
Pollination: This crop is mainly pollinated by self. Keeping flowers healthy and having insects like bees in the field helps improve fruit set and yields.
Where it grows: Sub-Saharan Africa; cultivated across East Africa It is grouped under: Vegetables.
Best climate: This crop does well in warm areas where the temperature is usually between 18 and 28 degrees Celsius. It prefers places that receive around 600 to 1200 millimetres of rain in a year. It can grow from near sea level up to about 2400 metres above sea level.
Soil: The crop grows best in slightly acidic to near neutral soils, with a pH of about 5.5 to 6.8. It does well in well-drained loam with high organic matter. Good drainage is important, so avoid waterlogged spots.
Plant spacing: Plant in rows about 30 centimetres apart, and leave about 20 centimetres between plants in the row. This gives each plant enough space for roots and canopy to spread.
Planting depth: Dig planting holes or furrows about 0.5 centimetres deep so the roots sit firmly in the soil but are not buried too deep.
Seed or planting material: Use around 2 kilograms of seed or planting material per hectare. Spread or plant evenly so the field has a good stand without being overcrowded.
Nursery period: If you raise seedlings in a nursery, keep them there for about 25 days before transplanting to the main field, when they are strong and healthy.
Farmer guide (mwongozo wa mkulima)
Nutrient schedule (mbolea kwa hatua)
| # | Stage | DAP | Product | Rate | Targets (kg/ha) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Basal at transplant | 0 | Compost + NPK 17-17-17 | 5 t/ha + kg/ha | N: 17, P₂O₅: 17, K₂O: 17 | Incorporate compost; band NPK lightly 5 cm from seedlings |
| 2 | Topdress 1 | 14 | CAN 26% N | 60 kg/ha | N: 18, P₂O₅: —, K₂O: — | Irrigate after application |
| 3 | Topdress 2 | 28 | CAN 26% N + MOP | 60 kg/ha + kg/ha | N: —, P₂O₅: —, K₂O: — | Support regrowth prior to first heavy pickings |
| 4 | Maintenance (harvest phase) | 42 | Urea via fertigation (optional) | 10 kg N/ha/week | N: —, P₂O₅: —, K₂O: — | Weekly for 3–4 weeks depending on vigor |
| 5 | Micronutrient foliar | 21 | Trace mix (Fe, Zn, B) | 0 — | N: —, P₂O₅: —, K₂O: — | Apply early morning/late afternoon |
Nutrient requirements
| Nutrient | Stage | Amount | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| N | Basal | 30 | kg/ha |
| P₂O₅ | Basal | 30 | kg/ha |
| K₂O | Basal | 30 | kg/ha |
| N | Topdress | 70 | kg/ha |
Field images (picha shambani)
| Name | Country | Maturity | Traits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Broadleaf type | KE | 45–60 | Vigorous; higher leaf yield |
| Narrowleaf type | UG | 50–65 | Tolerates heat; mild flavor |
| Local landrace | TZ | 55–70 | Good regrowth after harvest |
| Stage | Product | Rate (kg/ha) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basal | Compost (well-decomposed) | 5000 | Incorporate before transplant |
| Basal | NPK 17-17-17 | 150 | Band lightly beside seedlings |
| Topdress | CAN 26% N | 120 | Split into two 60 kg/ha doses |
| Topdress | MOP (KCl) | 30 | If tissue tests show low K |
| Foliar | Micronutrient mix | 0 | Apply as per label |
| Name | Type | Symptoms | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aphids | pest | Curling shoots; sticky honeydew | Scout weekly; remove infested tips; soft soaps/labelled selective insecticides; conserve natural enemies |
| Spider mites | pest | Maintain humidity; miticides if severe | |
| Leaf spots | disease | Sanitation; avoid overhead irrigation; fungicides if needed | |
| Leaf miners | pest | Serpentine mines in leaves | Remove mined leaves; use traps; rotate actives if spraying |
| Red spider mites | pest | Stippling; webbing under hot/dry conditions | Maintain humidity; spot-spray oils/acaricides if needed |
| Flea beetles | pest | Shot holes on young leaves | Mulch; row covers; spot treatments if severe |
| Bacterial wilt | disease | Sudden wilting; bacterial ooze | Rotate 2–3 years out of solanaceae; rogue infected plants; sanitize tools |
| Early blight | disease | Target-like leaf spots | Improve airflow; avoid overhead irrigation; fungicide if needed |
| Powdery mildew | disease | White powdery growth | Scout; sulfur/labelled fungicides; remove heavily infected leaves |
| System | Typical | Min | Max | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rainfed smallholder | 10 | 5 | 15 | Cumulative across repeated pickings (fresh leaves) |
| irrigated | 10 | 6 | 15 | |
| open-field | 12 | 8 | 18 | Leafy biomass (fresh) |
| irrigated / intensive | 18 | 10 | 25 | Good fertility and frequent harvests |
| Country | Region | Planting | Harvest |
|---|---|---|---|
| KE | Highlands (long rains) | Mar–Apr | May–Jul |
| KE | Highlands (short rains) | Oct–Nov | Dec–Feb |
| UG | Central/Western (1st) | Mar–Apr | May–Jul |
| UG | Central/Western (2nd) | Aug–Sep | Oct–Dec |
| TZ | Northern unimodal | Nov–Dec | Jan–Mar |
| Country | Region | Suitability |
|---|---|---|
| ET | Mid-altitude areas | Medium |
| KE | Arid/semi-arid | Low |
| KE | Coastal humid | Medium |
| KE | Highlands & mid-altitudes | High |
| KE | Western | |
| RW | Highland zones | High |
| TZ | Northern highlands | High |
| UG | Central & Western | High |