Leucostele terscheckii explained

Leucostele terscheckii, commonly known as the cardon grande cactus or Argentine saguaro, is a large cactus native to South America and popular in cultivation.[1]

Description

It is a columnar, branching cactus that can grow over 7.6m (24.9feet) tall. Its branches are about 25cm (10inches) in diameter with 8 to 14 ribs. Branches are cylindrical, fleshy, light green. The branches are 10-20 cm in diameter, with 8-14 blunt ribs. It has large brownish areoles about 2.5cm (01inches) apart with 8 to 15 yellowish spines, 8.3– long, a central one, sometimes absent, and 8-15 radial. The nocturnal funnel-shaped white flowers can grow up to 15– long and 13– wide. Pericarp and flower tube with dense white or brown axillary hairs. The round or oblong blue fruits are about 1.3cm (00.5inches) in diameter and contain black to brown, oval seeds approximately 0.76mm long.[2]

Native distribution

It is native to several provinces including Jujuy, Tucumán, La Rioja, San Juan, Catamarca and Salta provinces in northwestern Argentina, and is the eponymous cactus of Los Cardones National Park in Salta Province. Range continues to the western slopes of the Andes in Peru, Bolivia department of Tarija, and Ecuador. It is found growing on dry slopes of the Andean foothills at altitudes of 500 to 1500 meters.

Taxonomy

This species was first describe as Cereus terscheckii by Ludwig Georg Karl Pfeiffer was published in 1837.[3] Heimo Friedrich and Gordon Douglas Rowley placed the species in the genus Echinopsis in 1974.[2] The specific epithet terscheckii honors the court gardener Carl Adolph Terscheck of Japanisches Palais in Dresden. In 2012, Boris O. Schlumpberger reclassified the species into the genus Leucostele.[4]

Human uses

Leucostele terscheckii contains > 0.005-0.025% mescaline[5] in fresh cactus and 0.01%-2.375%[6] mescaline in dry weight, so dried cactus is sometimes processed for mescaline hydrochloride.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cardon Grande (Echinopsis terscheckii). Desert-tropicals.com. 14 January 2015.
  2. Book: Rowley, Gordon. Reunion of the Genus Echinopsis. Crown Publishing. New York. 1978. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Succulents. 978-0-517-53309-3.
  3. Web site: Dietrich . Albert . Otto . Friedrich . Allgemeine Gartenzeitung . Biodiversity Heritage Library . v.5 (1837) . 1837 . 2024-01-15.
  4. Boris O. Schlumpberger: New combinations in the Echinopsis alliance. In: Cactaceae Systematics Initiatives. Nr. 28, 2012, S. 30.
  5. Web site: Partial List of Alkaloids in Trichocereus Cacti. Thenook.org. 22 December 2017.
  6. http://entheogen.netfirms.com/articles/articles/Narcotic_Cacti.html Forbidden Fruit Archives