Cylindropuntia versicolor

(Engelmann ex J. M. Coulter) F. M. Knuth

in C. Backeberg and F. M. Knuth, Kaktus-ABC, 125. 1935.

Common names: Staghorn cholla
Basionym: Opuntia versicolor Engelmann ex J. M. Coulter Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 3: 452. 1896
Synonyms: Opuntia arborescens var. versicolor (Engelmann ex J. M. Coulter) Dams Opuntia thurberi subsp. versicolor (Engelmann ex J. M. Coulter) Felger & Lowe
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 109. Mentioned on page 105, 106, 107, 112, 116.

Trees or shrubs, openly branching at acute angles, to 2 m. Stem segments whorled or subwhorled, purple to green-purple, 4–18 × 1–2 cm; tubercles prominent, elongate-oval, 1–2(–2.5) cm; areoles subcircular, 3.5–4 mm diam.; wool tan to brown, aging gray. Spines 6–8 per areole (1–2 bristlelike spines) increasing with time, well distributed along stem, slightly interlacing with spines of adjacent areoles, short; abaxial spines usually reflexed, whitish, pinkish to red-brown, lightly flattened, the longest 10–18 mm; adaxial spines erect or spreading, rich red-brown, gray coated basally, subterete, 6–11 mm; sheaths grayish, tipped brown or yellow to golden Glochids in small adaxial tuft or crescent, dark yellow, to 1 mm. Flowers: inner tepals yellow-green, yellow to gold or bronze, or red to rose or magenta, spatulate, apiculate; filaments yellowish green; anthers yellow; style whitish to pale bronze; stigma lobes whitish. Fruits often proliferating, yellowish green or tinged red to purple, often stipitate, obovate, 25–40 × 10–20 mm, leathery-fleshy, tuberculate or smooth, essentially spineless; tubercles prominent, at first, subequal in length or proximal ones longer, fertile ones swelling and becoming smooth; umbilicus to 9 mm deep; areoles 20–30. Seeds yellowish, polygonal in outline, warped, 3.5–5.5 × 2.5–5 mm, sides nearly flattened with depressions and protrusions to angular subspheric; girdle smooth or in a groove. 2n = 22.


Phenology: Flowering spring (Apr–Jun).
Habitat: Sonoran Desert, desert scrub, flats, washes, rocky hillsides, canyons
Elevation: 600-1300 m

Discussion

Cylindropuntia versicolor forms hybrids with C. acanthocarpa var. major, C. arbuscula (= C. ×vivipara), C. leptocaulis (see discussion under 3. C. ×tetracantha), and C. spinosior (= C. ×grantiorum P. V. Heath). Cylindropuntia ×grantiorum, found in eastern to south-central Arizona, is intermediate between the parental species in values for the number of spines per stem areole, stem segment diameter and color, and fruit tubercles. The hybrids between C. versicolor and C. acanthocarpa var. major, which occur in south-central Arizona, have fleshy, tuberculate fruits, often with one or two short permanent spines at apex and longer and more numerous spines per stem areole.

Cylindropuntia versicolor itself may be of hybrid origin.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Cylindropuntia versicolor"
Donald J. Pinkava +
(Engelmann ex J. M. Coulter) F. M. Knuth +
Opuntia versicolor +
Staghorn cholla +
Ariz. +  and Mexico (Sonora). +
600-1300 m +
Sonoran Desert, desert scrub, flats, washes, rocky hillsides, canyons +
Flowering spring (Apr–Jun). +
in C. Backeberg and F. M. Knuth, Kaktus-ABC, +
Opuntia arborescens var. versicolor +  and Opuntia thurberi subsp. versicolor +
Cylindropuntia versicolor +
Cylindropuntia +
species +