The North American Species of Cactus, Anhalonium, and Lophophora | Page 5

John M. Coulter
or cespitose), but
sometimes slender-cylindrical, covered with spine-bearing tubercles:
flower-bearing areola axillary (with reference to tubercles), entirely
separate from the terminal spine-bearing areola, although sometimes
(Coryphantha) connected with it by a woolly groove along the upper
face of the tubercle: ovary naked: seeds smooth or pitted: embryo
usually straight, with short cotyledons. Originally defined by Linnaeus
in his Systema, ed. l (1735).
The Linnaean genus Cactus of 1753 included 22 species and was
coextensive with the present order. In 1812 the species were separated
by Haworth into five genera, the original generic name Cactus being
discarded. Among these species C. mamillaris seems to have stood as
the type, not only of the Linnaean genus Cactus, but also of Haworth's
Mamillaria, and as such should retain the original generic name.
Besides, Mamillaria was used as the generic name of an alga in 1809.
Cactus mamillaris L. is the West Indian Mamillaria simplex Haw.
From one point of view the two sections of the genus (Eumamillaria
and Coryphantha) deserve generic separation, for the character of
grooveless and grooved tubercles seems to hold without exception, and
the sections are separated with more certainty than are certain species
of Coryphantha and Echinocactus. If genera are simply groups of
convenience the separation should be made.

I. EUMAMILLARIA. Flowers from the axils of the older or full-grown
tubercles (hence usually appearing lateral), mostly small, and generally
from whitish to pink or red: tubercles never grooved: fruit almost
always clavate and scarlet.
A. Tubercles more or less quadrangular.
* Central spines not hooked. + More than one central spine.
1. Cactus alternatus, sp. nov.
Subglobose, 10 cm. in diameter, simple: tubercles long (15 to 20 mm.)
and spreading, with woolly axils: radial spines 3, rigid and recurved, 5
mm. long; central spines 3, very stout and much recurved, 20 to 30 mm.
long, alternating with the radials; all ashy colored and often twisted:
flower and fruit unknown.--Type in Herb. Coulter.
The few spines, with the very short radials alternating with the very
long and stout centrals, furnish a striking character. Occasionally one of
the centrals is wanting.
2.Cactus acanthophlegmus (Lehm.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. Pl. 260 (1891).
Mamillaria acanthophlegma Lehm. Delect. Sem. Hamb. (1833)
Subglobose with a deeply depressed vertex, or becoming cylindrical, 3
to 8.5 cm. in diameter: tubercles sharply quadrangular-conical, with
densely woolly axils: radial spines 15 to 30, white, very slender (bristly)
and radiant, sometimes coarse capillary, 4 to 7 mm. long, interwoven
with those of neighboring tubercles and so covering the whole plant;
central spines 2 to 4, robust and straight, erect or divergent, whitish or
reddish, black-tipped, 5 to 6.5 mm. long: flowers reddish, 1 to 2 cm.
broad: fruit unknown. Type unknown.
From Coahuila and San Luis Potosi to Oaxaca. Fl. May.
Specimens examined: Coahuila (Poselger of 1856; Pringle 3116 of
1890): San Luis Potosi (Eschanzier of 1891).
The central spines are quite variable in number and arrangement. In
case there are two they are vertically placed and are either erect and
parallel or widely divergent. Even three centrals may occur in the same
vertical plane; but more usually the three or four centrals are arranged
about a center and are widely divergent. The tubercles are apt to persist
and to become naked and corky with age. The axillary wool and the
capillary radials are also apt to be more or less persistent, thus giving
the whole plant a woolly appearance.
3.Cactus brandegei, sp. nov.

Cylindrical: tubercles sharply quadrangular-conical, 6 to 8 mm. long,
with densely woolly axils: radial spines about 10, slender and rigid,
whitish with dusky tips, spreading but not radiant, 7 to 10 mm. long;
central spines 3 or 4, stouter and slightly longer, erect-spreading
(sometimes slightly curved), reddish-brown below, becoming blackish
above: flowers small (scarcely longer than the tubercle?): fruit
unknown. Type in Herb. Calif. Acad.
San Jorge, Lower California. Fl. April.
Specimens examined: Lower California (Brandegee of 1889, at San
Jorge).
The species has somewhat the spine characters of C. palmeri, but the
sharply quadrangular and longer tubercles with axillary wool free from
bristles suggest a very different affinity.
4.Cactus densispinus, sp. nov.
Globose, 7.5 cm. in diameter, simple: tubercles short, with woolly axils:
radial spines about 25, erect-spreading, slender but rigid, yellow
(brownish to black with age), unequal, 8 to 10 mm. long; central spines
6, a little longer (10 to 12 mm.) and straight, more rigid and darker,
black-tipped: seeds obovate, reddish-brown, 1 mm. long. Type in Herb.
Coulter.
Very easily distinguished by its dense, erect spines, which so
completely cover the plant as to give it the appearance of a large
chestnut bur. Another much smaller form, which seems to be a variety,
has stouter and longer ashy-white spines, the centrals darker-tipped,
and the lower centrals slightly curved.
++ One short central spine (rarely two or
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