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Opuntia corallicola

(Florida Semaphore Cactus)

Overview

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Critically Endangered

Threat status

Common Names

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Common Names in English:

Florida Semaphore Cactus

Description

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Family Cactaceae

Fleshy perennials , shrubs , trees or vines , terrestrial or epiphytic. Stems jointed , terete , globose , flattened, or fluted , mostly leafless and variously spiny . Leaves alternate, flat or subulate to terete, vestigial, or entirely absent; spines, glochids (easily detached, small, bristlelike spines), and flowers always arising from cushionlike, axillary areoles (modified short shoots ) . Flowers solitary, sessile, rarely clustered and stalked (in Pereskia), bisexual , rarely unisexual , actinomorphic or occasionally zygomorphic. Receptacle tube (hypanthium or perianth tube) absent or short to elongate , naked or invested with leaflike bracts, scales , areoles, and hairs , bristles , or spines; perianth segments usually numerous , in a sepaloid to petaloid series. Stamens numerous, variously inserted in throat and tube; anthers 2-loculed, dehiscing longitudinally. Ovary (pericarpel) inferior, rarely superior, 1-loculed, with 3 to many parietal (rarely basal) placentas; ovules usually numerous; style 1; stigmas 2 to numerous, papillate , rarely 2-fid. Fruit juicy or dry, naked, scaly , hairy , bristly , or spiny, indehiscent or dehiscent , when juicy then pulp derived from often deliquescent funicles (except in Pereskia) . Seeds usually numerous, often arillate or strophiolate ; embryo curved or rarely straight; endosperm present or absent; cotyledons reduced or vestigial, rarely leaflike.

About 110 genera and more than 1000 species: temperate and tropical America; Rhipsalis baccifera (J. S. Mueller) Stearn native in tropical Africa, Madagascar, Comoros, Mascarenes, and Sri Lanka; some species of other genera now extensively naturalized in the Old World through human agency; more than 60 genera and 600 species cultivated as ornamentals or hedges in China, of which four genera and seven species more or less naturalized.[1]

Genus Opuntia

Trees or shrubs , erect to trailing , usually many branched, sometimes forming clumps or mats; trunk , when present, initially segmented , appearing continuous with age, main axis determinate, usually terete . Stem segments green or sometimes reddish to purple, usually flattened, circular, elliptic , ovate , lanceolate, or obovate to oblanceolate , 2-60(-120) × 1.2-40 cm, nearly smooth to tuberculate , glabrous or pubescent ; areoles usually elliptic, circular, or obovate, 3-8(-10) × 1-7(-10) mm; wool white, gray, or tan to brown, aging white or gray to black. Spines 0-15+ per areole, white, yellow to brown, red-brown to gray, or black, sometimes partly to wholly white chalky (chalkiness disappearing when wet), aging gray to dark brown to black, with epidermis intact, not sheathed, acicular to subulate , sometimes setose or with hairlike bristles , terete to angular-flattened, to 75(-170) mm, tips sometimes paler or yellow. Glochids in adaxial crescent at margin of areole, in tuft or encircling areole margin, white to yellow to brown, or red-brown, aging white to brown or red-brown. Flowers bisexual or sometimes functionally staminate , radially symmetric ; outer tepals green to yellow with margins tinged color of inner tepals; inner tepals pale yellow to orange, pink to red or magenta, rarely white (unicolored) or with base of a different color (bicolored ), oblong to spatulate , emarginate-apiculate; nectar chamber simple , open, not covered by proximal thickening style. Pollen yellow, grains reticulate or foveolate (opuntioid type). Fruits sometimes proliferating (sprouting from another fruit), if fleshy , green, yellow, or red to purple or, if dry, tan to gray, straight, sometimes stipitate , clavate to cylindric , ovoid , or obovoid to subspheric, 10-120 × 8-120 mm, fleshy to juicy or dry, smooth or tuberculate, spineless or spiny , sometimes burlike. Seeds pale yellow to tan or gray, generally circular to reniform , flattened (discoid ) to subspheric, angular to squarish, sometimes warped, 2-7 × 2-7 mm, glabrous, commonly bearing 1-4 large, shallow depressions due to pressures from adjacent developing seeds; girdle protruding 0.3-3.5 mm, forming ridge or flat wing, or not protruding. x = 11.

Species ca. 150 species: widespread in North America, Mexico, West Indies, South America, including the Galápagos Islands; some species introduced to and naturalized in the Old World.

Many taxa are cultivated for ornamental plants , food, and animal fodder . Some species of Opuntia become obnoxious weeds ; some species have been planted in Africa for stabilization of sand dunes.

Many interspecific hybrids are known and have been named; only five are fully treated here; two other named hybrids recognized by the author are briefly described and cross-referenced under putative parent taxa.[2]

Taxonomy

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Similar Species

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Members of the genus Opuntia

ZipcodeZoo has pages for 1155 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:

O. abjecta · O. abyssi · O. acanthocarpa (Stag-Horn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow (Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. coloradensis L.Benson (Colorado Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa ganderi · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. major (Engelm. & Bigelow) L.Benson (Slender Joint Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. thornberi (Thornb. & Bonker) L.Benson (Thornber's Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa var. acanthocarpa (Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa var. coloradensis (Colorado Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa var. major (Slender Joint Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa var. thornberi (Thornber's Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acaulis (Opuntia) · O. acicularis (Old Man Whiskers) · O. aciculata (Chenille Prickly Pear) · O. acracantha · O. aequatorialis · O. affinis · O. aggeria (Big Bend Pricklypear) · O. agglomerata · O. airampo · O. alamosensis · O. albicans · O. albicarpa · O. albiflora · O. albisaetacens · O. albisetosa · O. alburdina · O. alcahes · O. alcerrecensis · O. alexanderi · O. alexanderi Britton & Rose var. bruchii (Speg.) Backeb. · O. alfagayucca · O. alko-tuna (Opuntia) · O. allairei · O. alpicola · O. alta · O. amarilla · O. ambigua · O. ammophila · O. amyclaea (Opuntia) · O. anacantha (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. anacantha · O. anacantha var. kiska-loro (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. retrorsa (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. utikilio (Opuntia) · O. anahuacensis · O. andicola · O. angusta · O. angustata · O. anteojoensis · O. antillana · O. aoracantha · O. apurimacensis (Opuntia) · O. aquosa · O. arborea · O. arborescens · O. arbuscula (Arizona Pencil Cholla) · O. arbuscular · O. arcei (Opuntia) · O. archiconoidea · O. arechavaletae · O. arechavaletai · O. arechevaletai · O. arenaria (El Paso Pricklypear) · O. argentina · O. arizonica · O. arkansana · O. armata (Opuntia) · O. armata var. panellana · O. arrastradillo · O. articulata · O. articulata (Pfeiff.) D.R.Hunt var. inermis Speg. · O. articulata (Pfeiff.) D.R.Hunt var. papyracantha Phil. · O. asplundii · O. assumptionis (Opuntia) · O. atacamensis · O. atrispina (Devils River Prickly Pear) · O. atrocapensis · O. atroglobosa · O. atropes (Opuntia) · O. atrovirens (Opuntia) · O. atroviridis · O. auberi (Nopal De Lenguita) · O. aulacothele · O. aurantiaca (Jointed Prickly-Pear (Usa)) · O. aurea (Creeping Beavertail) · O. aureispina (Golden-Spined Prickly Pear) · O. australis · O. austrina · O. ayrampo · O. azurea (Nopal Coyotillo) · O. azurea var. aureispina · O. backebergii · O. bahamana · O. bahiensis · O. bakeri · O. balearica · O. ballii · O. barbata

More Info

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Further Reading

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Notes

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Identifiers

Footnotes

  1. Zhen-yu Li & Nigel P. Taylor "Cactaceae". in Flora of China Vol. 13 Page 209. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
  2. Donald J. Pinkava "Opuntia". in Flora of North America Vol. 4 Page 93, 94, 95, 102, 123, 232, 381. Oxford University Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
Last Revised: 7/2/2009