Ferocactus flavovirens explained

Ferocactus flavovirens is a species of Ferocactus from Mexico.[1]

Description

Ferocactus flavovirens forms clusters with plants growing up to 1 meter tall and more than 2 meters wide, with numerous spherical to cylindrical shoots. These shoots are light or gray-green, reaching heights of and diameters of up to, with 13 sharp ribs and widely spaced areoles. The needle-like spines are light brown to gray, with the higher spines occasionally lighter and bristle-like. It has four to six central spines up to long, with the lowest directed downwards, and 12 to 20 radial spines.

The funnel-shaped, yellow to yellowish-red flowers emerge from younger areoles at the shoot tip, reaching lengths of up to and diameters of . Its ellipsoid fruits are up to long, red, and covered in long, brown, bristly-tipped scales.[2] [3]

Distribution

Ferocactus flavovirens is a clustering cactus that grows in Mexico's Puebla and Oaxaca states on dry limestone hillsides.

Taxonomy

The species was first described as Echinocactus flavovirens in 1841 by Michael Joseph François Scheidweiler.[4] The specific epithet "flavovirens" comes from the Latin words for "yellow" and "greening," referring to the color of the shoots. In 1922, Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose reclassified it into the genus Ferocactus.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ferocactus flavovirens in Tropicos.
  2. Book: Anderson, Edward F. . Eggli . Urs . Das grosse Kakteen-Lexikon . Ulmer . Stuttgart (Hohenheim) . 2005 . 3-8001-4573-1 . de . 292.
  3. Web site: Ferocactus flavovirens . LLIFLE . 2013-08-04 . . 2024-01-22.
  4. Web site: Dietrich . Albert . Otto . Friedrich . Allgemeine Gartenzeitung . Biodiversity Heritage Library . v.9 (1841) . 1841 . 2024-01-22.
  5. Book: Britton, Nathaniel Lord . Eaton . Mary E. . Rose . J. N. . Wood . Helen Adelaide . The Cactaceae : descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family . Carnegie Institution of Washington . Washington . 1919 . 10.5962/bhl.title.46288 .