TREATMENT FROM THE JEPSON MANUAL (1993) |
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©Copyright 1993 by the Regents of the University of California
For up-to-date information about California vascular plants, visit the Jepson eFlora. |
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Perennial, shrub, tree, generally fleshy
Stem cylindric, spheric, or flat; surface smooth, tubercled, or ribbed (fluted); nodal areoles bear flowers, generally bear spines from center ("central spines") and margin ("radial spines") (Opuntia areoles bear small, barbed, deciduous bristles sometimes called glochids, generally also bear spines)
Leaf generally 0
Flower generally solitary, bisexual, sessile, ± radial; perianth parts generally many, grading from scale-like to petal-like; stamens many; ovary appearing inferior, ± submerged in stem, so generally with areoles on surface, style 1, stigma lobes generally many
Fruit generally fleshy, generally indehiscent, spiny, scaly, or smooth
Seeds many
Genera in family: 93 genera, ± 2000 species: especially Am deserts; many cultivated
Etymology: (Greek: thorny plant)
Reference: [Benson 1982 Cacti of US & Can; Hunt & Taylor eds 1990 Bradleya 8:85107]
Shrubs, trees; roots fibrous
Stem generally erect, < 12 m; segments flat to cylindric, generally firmly attached; tubercles generally elongate along stem; ribs sometimes present; spines 0many, sometimes flat, tip smooth or barbed, epidermis persistent or separating as a papery sheath; small, barbed deciduous bristles generally many
Leaf small, conic, fleshy, deciduous, obvious on young stems and ovaries
Fruit juicy, fleshy or dry; wall thick, bearing areoles
Seed dark brown, encased in a bony, whitish aril
Species in genus: 200 species: Am; O. ficus-indica cultivated for food, others for ornamental
Etymology: (Possibly from Papago Indian name ("opun") for this food plant; or named for a spiny plant of Opus, Greece)
Spines smaller, fewer in shade forms; when yellow, blacken with age.Hybridization common within subgenera.
Native |
Stem decumbent to ± tree-like, < 1.5 m; segments cylindric, terminal < 10 cm, 46 mm diam; tubercle 4.57.5 mm, 01 mm high; spines 03 (generally 1, spreading, long, dark, straight), < 4 cm, pink-gray to dark brown, sheath ± white to pale yellow, translucent, tip darker
Flower: inner perianth < 6 mm, orange-pink to red-brown; filaments pale green
Fruit < 2 cm, dry; spines dense (rarely 0)
Seed 24 mm
Chromosomes: 2n=22,44
Ecology: Desert flats
Elevation: < 1100 m.
Bioregional distribution: Desert
Distribution outside California: Nevada, Arizona
Flowering time: AprMay
Variable. O. wigginsii L.D. Benson (sw AZ, reported from DSon) is possibly O. ramosissima X O. echinocarpa
Recent taxonomic note: Cylindropuntia ramosissima (Engelm.) F.M. Knuth
Horticultural information: DRN, DRY, SUN: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 19, 20, 21.