Opuntia hyptiacantha F.A.C. Weber (1898: 894)

Martínez-González, César Ramiro, Gallegos-Vázquez, Clemente, Mascorro- Gallardo, José O. & Barrientos-Priego, Alejandro F., 2022, Molecular and morphological notes on Opuntia ser. Streptacanthae (Cactaceae), Phytotaxa 576 (1), pp. 1-28 : 20-23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.576.1.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7440910

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C1C014-FFD7-030A-559D-F9EEFCA0C21C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Opuntia hyptiacantha F.A.C. Weber (1898: 894)
status

 

Opuntia hyptiacantha F.A.C. Weber (1898: 894) View in CoL

Neotype (designated by Scheinvar et al. 2010: 287): — MEXICO. San Luis Potosí, 13 Km northwest of San Luis Potosí, 01 May 1973, Sánchez-Mejorada 1734 ( MEXU!).

Description:— Plant 2.0– 2.5 m high tree ( Fig. 15A View FIGURE 15 ). Defined trunk, 35 cm in diameter, slightly grayish scaly bark with light brown tones ( Fig. 15B View FIGURE 15 ). Glabrous epidermis ( Fig. 18C View FIGURE 18 ). Elliptical to oval cladodes, 32–40 cm long x 14–24 cm wide and 2–3 cm thick, green in color, covered with a light layer of wax ( Fig. 16A View FIGURE 16 ). Areolas arranged in 12–13 series, 3.6 cm spacing between series, 3.4 cm spacing between elliptical areolas, 0.4 × 0.3 cm, short black trichomes, ( Fig. 16B View FIGURE 16 ). Very small and scarce yellow glochids, arranged at the top of the areola. 0–9 white spines, yellowish apex, rigid, generally erect and diffuse, some of which are generally adpressed at the edge, unequal in length, 0.3–2.1 cm, the lower part of the cladode has no spines ( Fig. 16C View FIGURE 16 ). Juvenile cladodes with prominent tubers, areolas with short brown to black trichomes, some reddish white bristle hairs, erect subulate green leaves, with reddish apex ( Fig. 15C View FIGURE 15 ). Acute flower buds, reddish perianth segments with accumulated apex, elliptical pericarpel, slightly elevated tubers, areolas with short brown trichomes, brown glochids and areolas with brown bristles ( Fig. 16D and 16E View FIGURE 16 ). Yellow flowers ( Fig. 16F View FIGURE 16 ), 6.0–7.0 cm long, elliptical pericarp, ca. 3.4 × 2.3 cm, areolas arranged in 5–6 series, 0.66 cm spacing between them, with crass basal scale, outer segments of the perianth with obovate form, mucroned apex, smooth yellow edges, with medium greenish striation, reddish apex, oblanceolated inner segments, emarginated apex, yellow with reddish apical part, upper edges slightly dentate, stamens 1/3 of the length of the perianth, reddish and yellow filaments, yellow anthers, cuneiform style, ca. 1.9 cm long, light green, usually eight green papillary lobes of stigma, ca. 0.5 cm long, with medium white pink striation ( Fig. 17B View FIGURE 17 ). Red elliptical fruits ( Fig. 17C View FIGURE 17 ), 5.0– 6.5 cm long, sunken floral striated scar, large and circular to elliptical areolas, ( Fig. 17E View FIGURE 17 ), arranged in 4–5 series, 1 cm spacing from each other and 0.7 cm between series, long black trichomes, some spines, short yellow glochids, juicy and sweet pink red funicles ( Fig. 17D View FIGURE 17 ). Lenticular seed with irregular lateral aril, lateral trhead-micropilar region, micropilum and funiculus included ( Fig. 17F View FIGURE 17 ).

Micromorphology:— Thornswith lignified epidermal cells 98.35 ± 1.40 × 23.64 ± 1.10 μm in the distal part ( Fig. 18B View FIGURE 18 ), 61.22 ± 1.30 × 12.04 ± 1.40 μm, continuous epidermal cells and rough texture, in the middle part ( Fig. 18A View FIGURE 18 ). Glabrous epidermis, irregular epidermal cells ( Fig. 18C View FIGURE 18 ) and paracytic stomas ( Fig. 18D View FIGURE 18 ). Polyhedron-shaped pollen grain hexagonal, pantoaperturate ( Fig. 18E View FIGURE 18 ), 111.16 ± 1.40 μm in diameter, 8432.28 μm ² in area, 10.10 ± 1.90 μm distance between each distal opening (pores), with a diameter of 22.50 ± 1.50 μm, 15–17 pores with walls of 1.85 ± 0.14 μm width and wart ( Fig. 18F View FIGURE 18 ).

Vernacular names:— Nopal cascarón , tuna mansa, tuna corriente and Tuna chaveña (see e.g., Bravo-Hollis 1978, Anderson 2001, Scheinvar 2004).

Phenology:— Opuntia hyptiacantha blooms from March–April, whereas fruiting time if June–July.

Habitat and distribution:— Endemic to Mexico, it is known in the states of Aguascalientes, Ciudad de México, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Jalisco, México, Oaxaca, Puebla, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí, Tlaxcala and Zacatecas (see e.g., Arias et al. 1997, Guzmán et al. 2003, Scheinvar 2004, Scheinvar et al. 2010, Arias et al. 2012, Hernández et al. 2014) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). It grows in xerophytic scrub ( Rzedowski 1978).

MEXU

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Caryophyllales

Family

Cactaceae

Genus

Opuntia

Loc

Opuntia hyptiacantha F.A.C. Weber (1898: 894)

Martínez-González, César Ramiro, Gallegos-Vázquez, Clemente, Mascorro- Gallardo, José O. & Barrientos-Priego, Alejandro F. 2022
2022
Loc

Opuntia hyptiacantha F.A.C. Weber (1898: 894)

Weber, F. A. C. 1898: )
1898
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