Solanum coagulans (binomen a Petro Forskål anno 1775 statutum) est planta florens generis Solani subgenerisque Leptostemoni. Herba spinosa inter 0.7 m et 1 m alta, foliis simplicibus ovatis, fructibus rotundis diametro inter 0.7 cm et 1.3 cm, flores fructusque per omnem annum producit. In Africa boreo-orientali et Arabia, sed praesertim in Aethiopia Gibutoque et Iemenia sponte gignitur. In medicina adhibetur. "Acini lacti recenti immittuntur, ut subito coagulet," ait Petrus Forskål, qui primus, itinere botanico per Iemeniam facto, hanc speciem descripsit.[2]
- Petrus Forskål, Flora Aegyptiaco-Arabica (Hauniae: ex officina Mölleri, 1775) centuria ii p. 47
- Alshaimaa Hassan-Abdallah et al., "Medicinal plants and their uses by the people in the Region of Randa, Djibouti" in Journal of Ethnopharmacology vol. 148 (2013) pp. 701–713
- Xu-Jie Qin et al., "Chemical constituents of Solanum coagulans and their antimicrobial activities" in Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines vol. 14 (2016) pp. 308-312
- Maria S. Vorontsova, Sandra Knapp, A Revision of the "Spiny Solanums", Solanum subgenus Leptostemonum (Solanaceae) in Africa and Madagascar (Systematic Botany Monographs vol. 99. 2016) pp. 122-126 JSTOR
- Maria S. Vorontsova, Stephen Stern, Lynn Bohs, Sandra Knapp, "African spiny Solanum (subgenus Leptostemonum, Solanaceae): a thorny phylogenetic tangle" in Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society vol. 173 (2013) pp. 176–193