Matucana madisoniorum is a species of Matucana found in Peru.[1]
Matucana madisoniorum usually grows solitarily and only rarely sprouts with flattened, spherical to broadly columnar, cloudy grey-green shoots and reaches a height of up to with a diameter of . There are seven to twelve flat and broad transversely furrowed ribs. They have up to five blackish-brown, curved, flexible and slightly falling spines, which can also be absent, turn gray with age, up to long.
The narrow, funnel-shaped, slightly crooked, orange-red flowers are long and have a diameter of . The spherical, hairy fruits reach a diameter of up to .[2]
Matucana madisoniorum is found in the Peruvian Amazonas Department northeast of the city of Bagua in the valley of the Río Marañón at altitudes of 400 to 1000 meters.
The first description as Borzicactus madisoniorum was in 1963 by Paul Clifford Hutchison.[3] The specific epithet madisoniorum honors US attorney Marshall Pierce Madison (1895–1977), his wife Elena Eyre Madison, and the Madison Fund in San Francisco for supporting the University of California Botanical Garden. Gordon Douglas Rowley placed the species in the genus Matucana in 1973. Other nomenclature synonyms are Submatucana madisoniorum (Hutchison) Backeb. (1966), Loxanthocereus madisoniorum (Hutchison) Buxb. (1974), Eomatucana madisoniorum (Hutchison) F.Ritter (1981) and Anhaloniopsis madisoniorum (Hutchison) Mottram (2014).