Hamatocactus bicolor

(Terán & Berlandier) I. M. Johnston

Contr. Gray Herb. 70: 88. 1924.

Common names: Twisted-rib cactus
Basionym: Cactus bicolor Terán & Berlandier
Synonyms: Ferocactus setispinus (Engelma nn) L. D. Benson Hamatocactus setispinus (Englemann) Britton & Rose Thelocactus setispinus (Engelmann) E. F. Anderson
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 219. Mentioned on page 208, 209.
Revision as of 17:28, 18 September 2019 by FNA>Volume Importer

Spines: central spine yellowish, becoming ashy gray or reddish brown, 1–3.8 cm, minutely scabrous (use 30× lens). Flowers yellow with red centers, leaving obvious, concave abscission scars after fall of flower or fruit; proximal outer tepals obtuse or with broad ± auriculate distal portions; distal ones minutely fringed, acute; inner tepals oblanceolate; filaments reddish, pale yellow, or whitish, collectively spiraled around style; ovary 8–13 mm diam. Fruits displaced away from stem apex by apical growth subsequent to flowering. 2n = 22.


Phenology: Flowering spring–early fall.
Habitat: Grasslands, shrublands, especially mesquite thickets, heavy soils
Elevation: 0-300 m

Distribution

V4 410-distribution-map.gif

Tex., Mexico (Coahuila, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas).

Discussion

Hamatocactus bicolor is taxonomically isolated in the flora. It is perhaps most similar to Thelocactus bicolor, but H. bicolor is dramatically different in its juicy, scarlet fruits, yellow flowers, very narrowly and sharply ribbed stem surface, and hooked central spines. Hamatocactus bicolor is superficially similar to Ferocactus hamatacanthus var. sinuatus, which is larger and green-fruited with pitted seed coat and much larger yellow flowers lacking red centers. Glandulicactus uncinatus has hooked radial spines, rounded birbs, and small, maroon flowers.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Hamatocactus bicolor"
Allan D. Zimmerman +  and Bruce D. Parfitt +
(Terán & Berlandier) I. M. Johnston +
Cactus bicolor +
Twisted-rib cactus +
Tex. +, Mexico (Coahuila +, Nuevo León +  and Tamaulipas). +
0-300 m +
Grasslands, shrublands, especially mesquite thickets, heavy soils +
Flowering spring–early fall. +
Contr. Gray Herb. +
Illustrated +
Ferocactus setispinus +, Hamatocactus setispinus +  and Thelocactus setispinus +
Hamatocactus bicolor +
Hamatocactus +
species +