No, there is not. It is a fictional berry from the The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. There is, however, a poisonous berry called "nightshade" which is often mistaken for burdock. The formal name for nightshade is Atropa Belladonna.
It inhibits parasympathetic nerve impulses that are responsible for the involuntary movement of smooth muscles present in the gastrointestinal tract, urinary tract, lungs, etc, and basically stops your breathing.
The consumption of two to five berries by a human adult is lethal.
Nightlock is a poisinous berry from the book The Hunger Games
its called nightlock
Nightlock
It wasn't blood, it was the berry's juice.
Nightlock is the berry that can kill you (It killed "Foxface" in the Hunger Games). It is also the name of the pill that can kill you designed by Cinna, and also what you say three times to the electronic device to make it self destruct.
Peeta is responsible for Foxface's death because as Katniss was hunting, he was collecting berries, although he didn't know they were Nightlock, a very poisonous berry. As Peeta stores them in his bag and walks away to go and get Katniss, Foxface tries to steal these berries and eats one of them also not knowing they are Nightlock. This makes Peeta the one responsible because he is the one that picked them and put them in his bag, although it was Foxface's fault for trying to steal them.
At the very end of the games, when the announcement is made that they both can't survive
Peeta takes credit for Foxface's death in The Hunger Games, although he didn't do it on purpose. He picked Nightlock, a poisonous type of berry, intending it for him and Katniss to eat, although he didn't know it was poisonous. Foxface stole their food and ate it, therefore poisoning herself.
poison berries
The Nightlock
Nightlock. They pop up many times in later books.
nightlock