Difference between revisions of "Coryphantha missouriensis"

(Sweet) Britton & Rose in N. L. Britton and A. Brown

in N. L. Britton and A. Brown, Ill. Fl. N. U. S. ed. 2, 2: 570. 1913.

Common names: Missouri foxtail cactus
Basionym: Mammillaria missouriensis Sweet
Synonyms: Coryphantha missouriensis var. caespitosa (Engelmann) L. D. BensonCoryphantha missouriensis var. robustior (Engelmann) L. D. BensonEscobaria missouriensis (Engelmann) Britton & RoseNeobesseya missouriensis (Sweet) Britton & Rose ex RydbergNeobesseya similis unknownNeomam-millaria missouriensis unknown
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Mentioned on page 222, 223, 227, 228.
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--><span class="statement" id="st-d0_s0" data-properties="plant architecture;plant architecture;plant diameter;areole architecture;wool height or length or size;wool coloration"><b>Plants </b>unbranched or profusely branched (eastern populations), forming clumps to 30+ cm diam., spine-bearing areoles with short white wool not obscuring basal portion of spine.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s1" data-properties="root derivation;taproot density;taproot height or length or size;taproot derivation"><b>Roots </b>± diffuse or short taproots, sometimes adventitious from bases of branches.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s2" data-properties="stem location;stem shape;stem location;stem shape;stem shape;stem shape;stem shape;stem length;stem atypical width;stem atypical width;stem width"><b>Stems </b>deep-seated in substrate, becoming flat-topped and nearly subterranean in winter, oblate or spheric to obconic, 2–8 × (1–) 1.8–7.5 (–10) cm;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s3" data-properties="tubercle length;tubercle width;tubercle pubescence or texture">tubercles 5–21 × 3–6+ mm, soft;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s4" data-properties="areolar gland count">areolar glands absent;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s5" data-properties="parenchyma coating">parenchyma not mucilaginous;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s6" data-properties="druse size;druse shape">druses small and spheric;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s7" data-properties="pith count">pith 1/5–1/3 of lesser stem diam.;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s8" data-properties="medullary system architecture;medullary system count">medullary vascular system usually absent.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s9" data-properties="spine count;spine coloration;spine coloration;spine coloration;spine coloration;spine coloration;spine condition;spine size;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip coloration;tip count"><b>Spines </b>6–21 per areole, bright white, pale gray, or pale tan, weathering to gray or yellowish-brown, dark brownish orange to pale-brown or pale grayish pink tips present on all or only the largest;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s10" data-properties="spine arrangement;spine count;spine fixation or orientation;spine pubescence;spine pubescence">radial spines 6–20 per areole, moderately to tightly appressed, 4–16 × 0.07–0.35 mm, excluding pubescence;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s11" data-properties="outer central spine atypical count;outer central spine count;outer central spine orientation;outer central spine count;outer central spine orientation;outer central spine some measurement;areole count">outer central spines 0 (–2) per areole, if 1, erect, if 2, ascending-spreading, 9–18 mm;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s12" data-properties="inner central spine count;inner central spine orientation;inner central spine course;inner central spine length;inner central spine width">inner central spines 0–1 per areole, porrect (rarely ascending or erect), straight, 8–20 × 0.2–0.4 mm.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s13" data-properties="flower length;flower width;flower position"><b>Flowers </b>nearly apical, 18–50 × 15–50 mm;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s14" data-properties="outer tepal shape">outer tepals fringed (rarely entire);</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s15" data-properties="inner tepal count;inner tepal coloration;inner tepal coloration;inner tepal coloration;inner tepal coloration;midstripe coloration;midstripe coloration;midstripe coloration;midstripe coloration">inner tepals 13–25 per flower, pale greenish yellow to yellow-green with midstripes of green or rose-pink to pale-brown;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s16" data-properties="outer filament reflectance;outer filament coloration;outer filament coloration;outer filament coloration;base coloration">outer filaments brighter pink than inner tepals, pinkish with greenish white bases, or uniformly whitish;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s17" data-properties="anther coloration">anthers bright-yellow;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s18" data-properties="stigma lobe count;stigma lobe coloration;stigma lobe coloration;stigma lobe some measurement">stigma lobes 3–7, green or yellowish, 1–5 mm.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s19" data-properties="fruit coloration;fruit coloration;fruit coloration;fruit coloration;fruit coloration;fruit shape;fruit shape;fruit shape;fruit length;fruit width;fruit texture;fruit texture;funiculus relief"><b>Fruits </b>orange-red to scarlet, sometimes proximally carmine or nearly magenta, spheric to ellipsoid, 6.5–10 × 5–9 mm, slightly succulent but not juicy, the funiculi papillate;</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s20" data-properties="floral remnant duration;floral remnant life cycle">floral remnant weakly persistent, often lost through weathering.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s21" data-properties="seed coloration;seed shape;seed shape;seed shape;seed shape;seed some measurement;seed relief"><b>Seeds </b>black, nearly spheric to short pyriform, 1.4–2.2 mm., deeply pitted, outer cell-walls concave.</span> <span class="statement" id="st-d0_s22" data-properties="outer cell-wall shape;2n chromosome count;2n chromosome count">2n = 22, 44.</span><!--
+
--><span class="statement" id="st-undefined" data-properties=""><b>Plants </b>unbranched or profusely branched (eastern populations), forming clumps to 30+ cm diam., spine-bearing areoles with short white wool not obscuring basal portion of spine. <b>Roots</b> ± diffuse or short taproots, sometimes adventitious from bases of branches. <b>Stems</b> deep-seated in substrate, becoming flat-topped and nearly subterranean in winter, oblate or spheric to obconic, 2–8 × (1–)1.8–7.5(–10) cm; tubercles 5–21 × 3–6+ mm, soft; areolar glands absent; parenchyma not mucilaginous; druses small and spheric; pith 1/5–1/3 of lesser stem diam.; medullary vascular system usually absent. <b>Spines</b> 6–21 per areole, bright white, pale gray, or pale tan, weathering to gray or yellowish brown, dark brownish orange to pale brown or pale grayish pink tips present on all or only the largest; radial spines 6–20 per areole, moderately to tightly appressed, 4–16 × 0.07–0.35 mm, excluding pubescence; outer central spines 0(–2) per areole, if 1, erect, if 2, ascending-spreading, 9–18 mm; inner central spines 0–1 per areole, porrect (rarely ascending or erect), straight, 8–20 × 0.2–0.4 mm. <b>Flowers</b> nearly apical, 18–50 × 15–50 mm; outer tepals fringed (rarely entire); inner tepals 13–25 per flower, pale greenish yellow to yellow-green with midstripes of green or rose-pink to pale brown; outer filaments brighter pink than inner tepals, pinkish with greenish white bases, or uniformly whitish; anthers bright yellow; stigma lobes 3–7, green or yellowish, 1–5 mm. <b>Fruits</b> orange-red to scarlet, sometimes proximally carmine or nearly magenta, spheric to ellipsoid, 6.5–10 × 5–9 mm, slightly succulent but not juicy, the funiculi papillate; floral remnant weakly persistent, often lost through weathering. <b>Seeds</b> black, nearly spheric to short pyriform, 1.4–2.2 mm., deeply pitted, outer cell walls concave. <b>2n</b> = 22, 44.</span><!--
  
 
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|phenology=Flowering Apr–Jun; fruiting Jan–Jun(-Jul).
 
|habitat=Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks
 
|habitat=Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks
 
|distribution=Ariz.;Colo.;Kans.;Mont.;Nebr.;N.Mex.;N.Dak.;Okla.;S.Dak.;Tex.;Utah;Wyo.
 
|distribution=Ariz.;Colo.;Kans.;Mont.;Nebr.;N.Mex.;N.Dak.;Okla.;S.Dak.;Tex.;Utah;Wyo.
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|basionyms=Mammillaria missouriensis
 
|basionyms=Mammillaria missouriensis
 
|family=Cactaceae
 
|family=Cactaceae
 +
|phenology=Flowering Apr–Jun; fruiting Jan–Jun(-Jul).
 
|habitat=Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks
 
|habitat=Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks
 
|distribution=Ariz.;Colo.;Kans.;Mont.;Nebr.;N.Mex.;N.Dak.;Okla.;S.Dak.;Tex.;Utah;Wyo.
 
|distribution=Ariz.;Colo.;Kans.;Mont.;Nebr.;N.Mex.;N.Dak.;Okla.;S.Dak.;Tex.;Utah;Wyo.
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|publication year=1913
 
|publication year=1913
 
|special status=
 
|special status=
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-fine-grained-xml.git/src/287ef3db526bd807d435a3c7423ef2df1e951227/V4/V4_425.xml
+
|source xml=https://jpend@bitbucket.org/aafc-mbb/fna-data-curation.git/src/9216fc802291cd3df363fd52122300479582ede7/coarse_grained_fna_xml/V4/V4_425.xml
 
|subfamily=Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae
 
|subfamily=Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae
 
|genus=Coryphantha
 
|genus=Coryphantha
 
|species=Coryphantha missouriensis
 
|species=Coryphantha missouriensis
|2n chromosome count=44;22
 
|anther coloration=bright-yellow
 
|areolar gland count=absent
 
|areole architecture=spine-bearing
 
|areole count=1
 
|base coloration=greenish white
 
|druse shape=spheric
 
|druse size=small
 
|floral remnant duration=persistent
 
|floral remnant life cycle=lost
 
|flower length=18mm;50mm
 
|flower position=apical
 
|flower width=15mm;50mm
 
|fruit coloration=magenta;carmine;orange-red;scarlet
 
|fruit length=6.5mm;10mm
 
|fruit shape=spheric;ellipsoid
 
|fruit texture=not juicy;succulent
 
|fruit width=5mm;9mm
 
|funiculus relief=papillate
 
|inner central spine count=0;1
 
|inner central spine course=straight
 
|inner central spine length=8mm;20mm
 
|inner central spine orientation=porrect
 
|inner central spine width=0.2mm;0.4mm
 
|inner tepal coloration=yellow;yellow-green
 
|inner tepal count=13;25
 
|medullary system architecture=vascular
 
|medullary system count=absent
 
|midstripe coloration=rose-pink;pale-brown
 
|outer cell-wall shape=concave
 
|outer central spine atypical count=0;2
 
|outer central spine count=2;0
 
|outer central spine orientation=ascending-spreading;erect
 
|outer central spine some measurement=9mm;18mm
 
|outer filament coloration=whitish;pinkish;pink
 
|outer filament reflectance=brighter
 
|outer tepal shape=fringed
 
|parenchyma coating=not mucilaginous
 
|pith count=1/5;1/3
 
|plant architecture=branched;unbranched
 
|plant diameter=0cm;30cm
 
|root derivation=adventitious
 
|seed coloration=black
 
|seed relief=pitted
 
|seed shape=nearly spheric;short pyriform
 
|seed some measurement=1.4mm;2.2mm
 
|spine arrangement=radial
 
|spine coloration=pale tan;pale gray;pale tan;pale gray;bright white
 
|spine condition=weathering
 
|spine count=6;20
 
|spine fixation or orientation=appressed
 
|spine pubescence=0.07mm;0.35mm
 
|spine size=largest
 
|stem atypical width=7.5cm;10cm
 
|stem length=2cm;8cm
 
|stem location=subterranean;deep-seated
 
|stem shape=spheric;obconic
 
|stem width=1.8cm;7.5cm
 
|stigma lobe coloration=yellowish;green
 
|stigma lobe count=3;7
 
|stigma lobe some measurement=1mm;5mm
 
|taproot density=diffuse
 
|taproot derivation=adventitious
 
|taproot height or length or size=short
 
|tip coloration=pink;yellowish-brown dark brownish orange;pale-brown or pale grayish
 
|tip count=present
 
|tubercle length=5mm;21mm
 
|tubercle pubescence or texture=soft
 
|tubercle width=3mm;6mm
 
|wool coloration=white
 
|wool height or length or size=short
 
 
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Revision as of 14:11, 27 July 2019

Plants unbranched or profusely branched (eastern populations), forming clumps to 30+ cm diam., spine-bearing areoles with short white wool not obscuring basal portion of spine. Roots ± diffuse or short taproots, sometimes adventitious from bases of branches. Stems deep-seated in substrate, becoming flat-topped and nearly subterranean in winter, oblate or spheric to obconic, 2–8 × (1–)1.8–7.5(–10) cm; tubercles 5–21 × 3–6+ mm, soft; areolar glands absent; parenchyma not mucilaginous; druses small and spheric; pith 1/5–1/3 of lesser stem diam.; medullary vascular system usually absent. Spines 6–21 per areole, bright white, pale gray, or pale tan, weathering to gray or yellowish brown, dark brownish orange to pale brown or pale grayish pink tips present on all or only the largest; radial spines 6–20 per areole, moderately to tightly appressed, 4–16 × 0.07–0.35 mm, excluding pubescence; outer central spines 0(–2) per areole, if 1, erect, if 2, ascending-spreading, 9–18 mm; inner central spines 0–1 per areole, porrect (rarely ascending or erect), straight, 8–20 × 0.2–0.4 mm. Flowers nearly apical, 18–50 × 15–50 mm; outer tepals fringed (rarely entire); inner tepals 13–25 per flower, pale greenish yellow to yellow-green with midstripes of green or rose-pink to pale brown; outer filaments brighter pink than inner tepals, pinkish with greenish white bases, or uniformly whitish; anthers bright yellow; stigma lobes 3–7, green or yellowish, 1–5 mm. Fruits orange-red to scarlet, sometimes proximally carmine or nearly magenta, spheric to ellipsoid, 6.5–10 × 5–9 mm, slightly succulent but not juicy, the funiculi papillate; floral remnant weakly persistent, often lost through weathering. Seeds black, nearly spheric to short pyriform, 1.4–2.2 mm., deeply pitted, outer cell walls concave. 2n = 22, 44.


Phenology: Flowering Apr–Jun; fruiting Jan–Jun(-Jul).
Habitat: Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks

Distribution

V4 425-distribution-map.gif

Ariz., Colo., Kans., Mont., Nebr., N.Mex., N.Dak., Okla., S.Dak., Tex., Utah, Wyo.

Discussion

Plants of Coryphantha missouriensis are localized, inconspicuous (except for their red fruits in spring), and difficult for non-specialists to distinguish from more common species. Reports of C. missouriensis from Idaho are based on misidentified specimens of Pediocactus simpsonii (in the broad sense). The record from southwestern New Mexico (L. D. Benson 1982) is based on immature Mammillaria heyderi var. bullingtoniana.

Coryphantha missouriensis and its allies are diploid, except for the populations long known as Neobesseya similis (Engelmann) Britton & Rose, in the southeastern portion of the species’ range. Presently too few chromosome counts are available to allow satisfactory classification of the polyploids, which are larger in all parts but not always identifiable from morphology alone. The polyploids include some male-sterile plants, perhaps indicating some form of dioecy; their pollen grains display as much variation as the rest of the genus combined. Plants from Kansas and Oklahoma are especially morphologically ambiguous.

All parts including seeds, of Coryphantha missouriensis plants are generally larger in the Southwest (i.e., in Arizona) than northward. The neotenous populations in Navajo County, Arizona, are an exception, with the smallest individuals, shortest spines of the species. Both large and small extremes are diploid. The epithet marstonii [apparently based by L. D. Benson (1969) on C. vivipara] has been misapplied to the various Arizona and Utah populations of C. missouriensis, especially the peculiar plants in Navajo County, Arizona. In cultivation, the largest Arizona plants match dimensions of field-grown plants from proven tetraploid populations in central Texas; however, under the same greenhouse conditions the Texas plants become larger still, reaching the size of C. sulcata.

The fictional endemic Texas variety “var. robustior” [= Neobesseya wissmannii (Hildman ex K. Schumann) Britton & Rose] never corresponded to a populational entity. It evolved in the literature from robust individual plants in ordinary eastern populations, through misidentified plants of the sympatric C. sulcata, to inaccurate descriptions and maps based on mixtures of both species. Most published photographs captioned as “Neobesseya wissmannii” have portrayed misidentified plants of C. sulcata.

The closest relatives of Coryphantha missouriensis are C. asperispina Boedeker of Mexico and C. cubensis Britton & Rose of Cuba. Those species collectively composed the segregate genus Neobesseya, now rarely accepted.

Environmental degradation—introduced fire ants, suburban development, brush encroachment following fire suppression, and sometimes over-grazing—has extirpated Coryphantha missouriensis from many of its historically known sites. However, the vigorous polyploids rapidly colonize some disturbed habitats along with weedy species of Opuntia.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Coryphantha missouriensis"
Allan D. Zimmerman +  and Bruce D. Parfitt +
(Sweet) Britton & Rose in N. L. Britton and A. Brown +
Mammillaria missouriensis +
Missouri foxtail cactus +
Ariz. +, Colo. +, Kans. +, Mont. +, Nebr. +, N.Mex. +, N.Dak. +, Okla. +, S.Dak. +, Tex. +, Utah +  and Wyo. +
Plains, stony short-grass prairies, woodlands of ponderosa pine, pinyon, juniper, or Quercus gambelii, loamy places, often restricted to sedimentary rocks +
Flowering Apr–Jun +  and fruiting Jan–Jun(-Jul). +
in N. L. Britton and A. Brown, Ill. Fl. N. U. S. ed. +
Coryphantha missouriensis var. caespitosa +, Coryphantha missouriensis var. robustior +, Escobaria missouriensis +, Neobesseya missouriensis +, Neobesseya similis +  and Neomam-millaria missouriensis +
Coryphantha missouriensis +
Coryphantha +
species +