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   » » Wiki: Pelecyphora
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Pelecyphora, pincushion cactus or foxtail cactus " Escobaria Britton & Rose foxtail cactus" PLANTS database, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Department of Agriculture is a of , comprising 20 species. They originate from and the United States.

Common species include the Missouri foxtail cactus P. missouriensis, " Escobaria missouriensis (Sweet) D.R. Hunt - Missouri foxtail cactus" PLANTS database, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Department of Agriculture widespread in and forest west of the Mississippi, and the spinystar P. vivipara, " Escobaria vivipara (Nutt.) Buxbaum - spinystar" PLANTS database, Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Department of Agriculture distributed across the US and into Canada, first described by in 1813.


Description
Pelecyphores are spherical to club-shaped stem succulents up to in diameter and gray-green in color. They branch only sparsely and only at an older age. The standing on the longitudinally or transversely flattened warts have thorns in a pectinate (comb-shaped) arrangement. As we age, the thorns, then the areoles and finally the warts fall off. Between the warts, the plant bodies are initially dense and short-haired, so that the apexes are hidden.

The flowers arise individually from short furrows on the upper surfaces of the youngest areoles. They are bright purple and about long. The greenish fruits that form after the flowers are fertilized dry out when ripe and release the black seeds into the crown wool, from which they are only washed out (in nature) after a long time.

(2025). 9783800145737, Ulmer.


Taxonomy
Species accepted by Plants of the World Online with sections from Nigel Paul Taylor from 1986:
(2025). 9783800145737, Ulmer.

Pelecyphora strobiliformis Nuevo Leon, San Luis Potosi, Tamaulipas states in Mexico
Pelecyphora tuberculosa New Mexico, Mexico
Pelecyphora sneedii
  • Pelecyphora sneedii subsp. sneedii
  • Pelecyphora sneedii subsp. orcuttii
Mexico (Chihuahua), United States (Arizona, New Mexico, Texas)
Pelecyphora hesteri
  • Pelecyphora hesteri subsp. grata
  • Pelecyphora hesteri subsp. hesteri
Texas
Pelecyphora vivipara Canada (Alberta, Manitoba, Saskatchewan ), Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Sonora), United States (Arizona, California, Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wyoming)
Pelecyphora emskoetteriana Mexico (Coahuila de Zaragoza, Tamaulipas ), United States (Texas)
Pelecyphora duncanii New Mexico, Texas
Pelecyphora lloydii Mexico (Zacatecas)
Pelecyphora minima Texas
Pelecyphora robbinsiorum Arizona
Pelecyphora macromeris
  • Pelecyphora macromeris subsp. macromeris
  • Pelecyphora macromeris subsp. runyonii
S. New Mexico to W. Texas and NE. Mexico.
Pelecyphora missouriensis
  • Pelecyphora missouriensis subsp. missouriensis
  • Pelecyphora missouriensis subsp. asperispina
USA ( Arizona, Idaho, Kansas, New Mexico, North Dakota), Mexico (Coahuila de Zaragoza, Nuevo Leon)
Pelecyphora zilziana Mexico (Coahuila de Zaragoza)


Synonymy
At genus level
  • The genus Encephalocarpus A.Berger has been brought into synonymy with Pelecyphora.

At species level

The following are synonyms of species now placed outside of Pelecyphora:

  • Pelecyphora aselliformis var. pectinata (= Mammillaria pectinifera)
  • Pelecyphora pectinata (= Mammillaria pectinifera)
  • Pelecyphora pseudopectinata (= Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus)
  • Pelecyphora valdeziana (= Turbinicarpus valdezianus)
  • Pelecyphora plumosa (= Turbinicarpus valdezianus)
  • Pelecyphora pulcherrima (= Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus)


Psychoactivity
  • Pelecyphora aselliformis: (Less than 0.00002% in dry weight) Neal et al. 1972


Conservation status
Both P. aselliformis and P. strobiliformis are classified as being of Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, however both species are contained in Appendix 1 of species (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) as at June 2013.

  • Anderson, Edward F. (2001) The Cactus Family Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, pp. 307–314,


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