Eulychnia (Phil.)

Walter, Helmut E. & Guerrero, Pablo C., 2022, Towards a unified taxonomic catalogue for the Chilean cacti: assembling molecular systematics and classical taxonomy, Phytotaxa 550 (2), pp. 79-98 : 88

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.550.2.1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6645745

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B987C7-FFEF-FFBD-FF05-04EBFA0BFA72

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Eulychnia
status

 

Eulychnia View in CoL View at ENA :

—The genus includes two main clades according to Larridon et al. (2018) and Merklinger et al. (2021). The two groups are morphologically and phylogenetically supported and clearly associated with geographical changes in the Atacama Desert (a proposed key is reported below). According to the results of the phylogenetic analyses three former species-complexes were resolved: Eulychnia acida Phil. , E. breviflora Phil. , and E. iquiquensis (K.Schum.) Britton & Rose.

1. Ribs steep and narrow; flowers and fruits densely covered with wool; perianth segments lanceolate (“ breviflora View in CoL -group”) ............2

- Ribs broad and flattened; flowers and fruits with less and shorter wool; perianth segments spathulate (“ acida View in CoL -group”) ................6

2. Spines numerous, central ones very long; seed large .................................................................................................. 3. E. breviflora View in CoL

- Spines less numerous and shorter; seed smaller.................................................................................................................................3

3. Pulp orange; areoles with long wool; plants low to medium-sized....................................................................................................4

- Pulp whitish; areoles with shorter wool; plants higher ......................................................................................................................5

4. Plants shrubby; branches sub-prostrate, thin ........................................................................................................... 2. E. barquitensis View in CoL

- Plants arborescent; branches ascending, thicker ..................................................................................................... 7. E. saint-pieana View in CoL

5. Areoles far apart, wool dark brown ........................................................................................................................... 8. E. taltalensis View in CoL

- Areoles closely set, wool greyish ............................................................................................................................. 6. E. iquiquensis View in CoL

6. Flower and fruit areoles spiny ....................................................................................................................................... 4. E. castanea View in CoL

- Flower and fruit areoles spineless ......................................................................................................................................................7

7. Plants shrubby; branches (sub)prostrate with superior portions pointing upwards; ribs 8–12...........................................................8

- Plants arborescent; branches ascending to erect; ribs up to 16 .......................................................................................... 1. E. acida View in CoL

8. Shrubs low; branches thin, grey-green; flowers with short wool; new areoles with abundant white felt................ 5. E. chorosensis View in CoL

- Shrubs higher; branches thicker, yellowish-green; flowers with in conspicuous hairs; areoles with short grey felt........................... ............................................................................................................................................................................... 9. E. vallenarensis View in CoL

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF