Opuntia engelmannii var. lindheimeri

(Engelmann) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkava

Madroño 35: 346. 1988.

Common names: Texas pricklypear
Basionym: Opuntia lindheimeri Engelmann Boston J. Nat. Hist. 6: 207. 1850
Synonyms: Opuntia lindheimeri var. lehmannii L. D. Benson Opuntia lindheimeri var. tricolor (Griffiths) L. D. Benson Opuntia subarmata Opuntia tardispina
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 136. Mentioned on page 132, 133, 135.

Stem segments broadly obovate to subcircular, 15–30 × 12.5–25 cm, sometimes broader than wide, to 1.5 times longer than wide. Spines (0–)1–6 per areole, evenly distributed on stem segment to absent, yellow throughout, sometimes with red or red-brown extreme bases, aging blackish, longest 12–75 mm. 2n = 66.


Phenology: Flowering spring (Mar–Jun).
Habitat: Chihuahuan Desert, plains to woodlands and chaparral, sandy to gravelly or rocky soils
Elevation: 0-1900 m

Distribution

V4 255-distribution-map.gif

La., N.Mex., Tex., Mexico, South Africa (introduced).

Discussion

L. D. Benson (1982) grouped all large, yellow-spined plants in the Texas region under Opuntia lindheimeri. Plants known as O. lindheimeri var. lehmannii have large, wavy stem segments that are broader than long. Opuntia lindheimeri var. tricolor (Griffiths) L. D. Benson is a morphotype with long, yellow spines to 75 mm; and O. subarmata Griffiths is a morphotype with spineless or nearly spineless stems.

Although Opuntia engelmannii var. lindheimeri is a hexaploid, like the rest of O. engelmanni, several individuals were recorded as 2n = 22, 44, and ca. 44; however, such numbers require taxon verification.

Opuntia engelmannii var. lindheimeri hybridizes with O. stricta, forming hexaploid O. ×alta Griffiths, and with O. macrorhiza Engelmann, forming pentaploid O. ×edwardsii V. E. Grant & K. A. Grant.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Donald J. Pinkava +
(Engelmann) B. D. Parfitt & Pinkava +
Opuntia lindheimeri +
Texas pricklypear +
La. +, N.Mex. +, Tex. +, Mexico +  and South Africa (introduced). +
0-1900 m +
Chihuahuan Desert, plains to woodlands and chaparral, sandy to gravelly or rocky soils +
Flowering spring (Mar–Jun). +
Opuntia lindheimeri var. lehmannii +, Opuntia lindheimeri var. tricolor +, Opuntia subarmata +  and Opuntia tardispina +
Opuntia engelmannii var. lindheimeri +
Opuntia engelmannii +
variety +