Difference between revisions of "Ferocactus"

Britton & Rose

Cact. 3: 123, figs. 128-153b, plates 12-16. 1922.

Common names: Barrel cactus biznaga
Etymology: Latin ferus, fierce or wild, referring to the horrid spines, and Cactus, the genus from which this segregate was removed
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Mentioned on page 97, 98, 206, 207, 21.
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--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Plants </b>erect or leaning, unbranched (rarely branched after apical injury) or sparingly branched from base with age in F. hamatacanthus and F. viridescens [or many branched], deep-seated in substrate only in F. viridescens. <b>Roots</b> diffuse. <b>Stems</b> unsegmented, green, ovoid, spheric, depressed-spheric, or cylindric [or flat-topped and flush with soil surface], (0–)10–150(–300) × 7.5–80(–100) cm, glabrous; ribs [8–]10–32(–40), very prominent, rib crests straight or undulate, uninterrupted (deeply crenate in F. hamatacanthus or sometimes nearly tuberculate in immature plants); areoles nearly circular to oblong or elliptic, with fertile portion as short adaxial prolongation confluent with spine cluster or connected to spine cluster by very broad groove, short woolly; areolar glands usually present, sometimes very short and inconspicuous and/or short lived, adaxial in areoles, ovoid to cylindric, blunt, peglike; cortex and pith hard, not mucilaginous. <b>Spines</b> 6–32 per areole, yellow, brown, or reddish to salmon with color hidden by very thin, light gray layer, usually large and coarse, annulate-ridged (smooth in F. hamatacanthus), longest spines 30–130(–170) × 0.5–4.5 mm; radial spines 6–25 per areole, straight to curved, or crinkly bristles, 15–70 mm; central spines 1–4 per areole, flattened, angled, or terete, all or only largest adaxial spine hooked. <b>Flowers</b> diurnal, near stem apex, on large plants often several cm from stem apex, at adaxial edges of areoles (or at axillary end of short areolar groove), funnelform, 2.5–8.5(–10) cm; outer tepals margins entire [fringed]; inner tepals yellow, orange, red, or purple (or white with purplish midstripes); ovary scaly, hairless, spineless; scales numerous, broadly rounded to lanceolate, margins ± scarious, minutely to conspicuously fimbriate or denticulate, obtuse; stigma lobes 13–20, yellow, orange, or red, unusually long, 7.5–15 mm. <b>Fruits</b> weakly dehiscent through basal pore (indehiscent in F. hamatacanthus), green, yellow, brownish, or dull purple-red [to bright red], spheric, ovoid, or cylindric, 20–60 × 10–40 mm, thick walled, leathery, hollow except for seeds and long persistent (thin walled and juicy in F. hamatacanthus), with numerous scales, spineless; pulp whitish or, if fruit hollow, absent; floral remnant persistent, dried tepals often remaining distinct, papery, and straight or wavy. <b>Seeds</b> black or dark brown, spheric to subreniform, 1–2.9[–3.2] mm; testa cells flat, weakly convex, concave, or flat with central depressions, pitted or reticulate. <b>x</b> = 11.</span><!--
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--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Plants </b>erect or leaning, unbranched (rarely branched after apical injury) or sparingly branched from base with age in <i>F. hamatacanthus</i> and <i>F. viridescens</i> [or many branched], deep-seated in substrate only in <i>F. viridescens</i>. <b>Roots</b> diffuse. <b>Stems</b> unsegmented, green, ovoid, spheric, depressed-spheric, or cylindric [or flat-topped and flush with soil surface], (0–)10–150(–300) × 7.5–80(–100) cm, glabrous; ribs [8–]10–32(–40), very prominent, rib crests straight or undulate, uninterrupted (deeply crenate in <i>F. hamatacanthus</i> or sometimes nearly tuberculate in immature plants); areoles nearly circular to oblong or elliptic, with fertile portion as short adaxial prolongation confluent with spine cluster or connected to spine cluster by very broad groove, short woolly; areolar glands usually present, sometimes very short and inconspicuous and/or short lived, adaxial in areoles, ovoid to cylindric, blunt, peglike; cortex and pith hard, not mucilaginous. <b>Spines</b> 6–32 per areole, yellow, brown, or reddish to salmon with color hidden by very thin, light gray layer, usually large and coarse, annulate-ridged (smooth in <i>F. hamatacanthus</i>), longest spines 30–130(–170) × 0.5–4.5 mm; radial spines 6–25 per areole, straight to curved, or crinkly bristles, 15–70 mm; central spines 1–4 per areole, flattened, angled, or terete, all or only largest adaxial spine hooked. <b>Flowers</b> diurnal, near stem apex, on large plants often several cm from stem apex, at adaxial edges of areoles (or at axillary end of short areolar groove), funnelform, 2.5–8.5(–10) cm; outer tepals margins entire [fringed]; inner tepals yellow, orange, red, or purple (or white with purplish midstripes); ovary scaly, hairless, spineless; scales numerous, broadly rounded to lanceolate, margins ± scarious, minutely to conspicuously fimbriate or denticulate, obtuse; stigma lobes 13–20, yellow, orange, or red, unusually long, 7.5–15 mm. <b>Fruits</b> weakly dehiscent through basal pore (indehiscent in <i>F. hamatacanthus</i>), green, yellow, brownish, or dull purple-red [to bright red], spheric, ovoid, or cylindric, 20–60 × 10–40 mm, thick walled, leathery, hollow except for seeds and long persistent (thin walled and juicy in <i>F. hamatacanthus</i>), with numerous scales, spineless; pulp whitish or, if fruit hollow, absent; floral remnant persistent, dried tepals often remaining distinct, papery, and straight or wavy. <b>Seeds</b> black or dark brown, spheric to subreniform, 1–2.9[–3.2] mm; testa cells flat, weakly convex, concave, or flat with central depressions, pitted or reticulate. <b>x</b> = 11.</span><!--
  
 
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|distribution=sw United States;Mexico.
 
|distribution=sw United States;Mexico.
 
|discussion=<p>Species 25–30 (5 in the flora).</p><!--
 
|discussion=<p>Species 25–30 (5 in the flora).</p><!--
--><p>Recent molecular studies by C. A. Butterworth et al. (2002) suggested that Ferocactus may be an artificial assemblage of primitive species not closely related to each other.</p>
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--><p>Recent molecular studies by C. A. Butterworth et al. (2002) suggested that <i>Ferocactus</i> may be an artificial assemblage of primitive species not closely related to each other.</p>
 
|tables=
 
|tables=
 
|references={{Treatment/Reference
 
|references={{Treatment/Reference
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|publication year=1922
 
|publication year=1922
 
|special status=
 
|special status=
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/9216fc802291cd3df363fd52122300479582ede7/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V4/V4_444.xml
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|source xml=https://bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation/src/2e0870ddd59836b60bcf96646a41e87ea5a5943a/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V4/V4_444.xml
 
|subfamily=Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae
 
|subfamily=Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae
 
|genus=Ferocactus
 
|genus=Ferocactus

Latest revision as of 21:58, 5 November 2020

Plants erect or leaning, unbranched (rarely branched after apical injury) or sparingly branched from base with age in F. hamatacanthus and F. viridescens [or many branched], deep-seated in substrate only in F. viridescens. Roots diffuse. Stems unsegmented, green, ovoid, spheric, depressed-spheric, or cylindric [or flat-topped and flush with soil surface], (0–)10–150(–300) × 7.5–80(–100) cm, glabrous; ribs [8–]10–32(–40), very prominent, rib crests straight or undulate, uninterrupted (deeply crenate in F. hamatacanthus or sometimes nearly tuberculate in immature plants); areoles nearly circular to oblong or elliptic, with fertile portion as short adaxial prolongation confluent with spine cluster or connected to spine cluster by very broad groove, short woolly; areolar glands usually present, sometimes very short and inconspicuous and/or short lived, adaxial in areoles, ovoid to cylindric, blunt, peglike; cortex and pith hard, not mucilaginous. Spines 6–32 per areole, yellow, brown, or reddish to salmon with color hidden by very thin, light gray layer, usually large and coarse, annulate-ridged (smooth in F. hamatacanthus), longest spines 30–130(–170) × 0.5–4.5 mm; radial spines 6–25 per areole, straight to curved, or crinkly bristles, 15–70 mm; central spines 1–4 per areole, flattened, angled, or terete, all or only largest adaxial spine hooked. Flowers diurnal, near stem apex, on large plants often several cm from stem apex, at adaxial edges of areoles (or at axillary end of short areolar groove), funnelform, 2.5–8.5(–10) cm; outer tepals margins entire [fringed]; inner tepals yellow, orange, red, or purple (or white with purplish midstripes); ovary scaly, hairless, spineless; scales numerous, broadly rounded to lanceolate, margins ± scarious, minutely to conspicuously fimbriate or denticulate, obtuse; stigma lobes 13–20, yellow, orange, or red, unusually long, 7.5–15 mm. Fruits weakly dehiscent through basal pore (indehiscent in F. hamatacanthus), green, yellow, brownish, or dull purple-red [to bright red], spheric, ovoid, or cylindric, 20–60 × 10–40 mm, thick walled, leathery, hollow except for seeds and long persistent (thin walled and juicy in F. hamatacanthus), with numerous scales, spineless; pulp whitish or, if fruit hollow, absent; floral remnant persistent, dried tepals often remaining distinct, papery, and straight or wavy. Seeds black or dark brown, spheric to subreniform, 1–2.9[–3.2] mm; testa cells flat, weakly convex, concave, or flat with central depressions, pitted or reticulate. x = 11.

Distribution

sw United States, Mexico.

Discussion

Species 25–30 (5 in the flora).

Recent molecular studies by C. A. Butterworth et al. (2002) suggested that Ferocactus may be an artificial assemblage of primitive species not closely related to each other.

Key

1 Stems 7.5-30 cm diam.; central spines very flexible, sometimes almost papery, (0.5-)1-3 mm wide; fruits thin walled, soft, green or maroon, indehiscent, locule juicy; El Paso and eastward in Texas Ferocactus hamatacanthus
1 Stems 10-65(-100) cm diam. or, if smaller at maturity, then from coastal California; central spines rigid, 1.5-4(-7) mm wide; fruits thick walled, leathery or fleshy, bright yellow (rarely reddish), ± dehiscent through small basal pore (abscission scar), locule dry; El Paso, Texas, and westward to California > 2
2 Areoles with spines of approximately uniform thickness, all robust and rigid, more than 1 mm thick; flowers brilliant red inside and outside [yellow in Mexico] Ferocactus emoryi
2 Areoles with slender, bristlelike spines less than 1mm thick in addition to thick, rigid spines, or if spines all rigid (in "F. eastwoodiae" form of F. cylindraceus), then flowers yellow inside and yellow to maroon outside > 3
3 Ribs 13-21[-34]; stems usually 10-20 × 10-20 cm; coastal California Ferocactus viridescens
3 Ribs (18-)21-31(-40); stems usually 45-150 × 25-65 cm; California deserts eastward > 4
4 Seeds nearly smooth with slightly raised reticulations; flower color similar inside and outside: red, orange, or yellow; largest central spine of each areole usually strongly hooked; adult plants usually leaning southward; flowering late summer; c Arizona eastward Ferocactus wislizeni
4 Seeds pitted; flower maroon (or partly so) outside, yellow inside; largest central spine of each areole curved or twisted, not strongly hooked; adult plants usu- ally erect; flowering spring to early summer; sc Arizona westward Ferocactus cylindraceus
... more about "Ferocactus"
Allan D. Zimmerman +  and Bruce D. Parfitt +
Britton & Rose +
Barrel cactus +  and biznaga +
sw United States +  and Mexico. +
Latin ferus, fierce or wild, referring to the horrid spines, and Cactus, the genus from which this segregate was removed +
lindsay1956a +, taylor1979a +, taylor1983b +  and taylor1984a +
Ferocactus +
Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae +