Overview
|
Vulnerable |
|
Interesting Facts
Common Names
Click on the language to view common names.
Common Names in English:
Teddy-Bear Cactus, Choya Güera, Teddy Bear Cholla, Teddybear Cholla
Common Names in Spanish:
Cholla Velas De Coyote
Common Names in unspecified:
Teddybear Cholla
Description
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]
Physical Description
Habit: Subshrub , Shrub
Biology
Reproduction
Duration: Perennial
Taxonomy
- Domain:
Eukaryota
(
)
- Whittaker & Margulis,1978
- eukaryotes
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
)
- Haeckel, 1866
- Plants
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
)
- Cavalier-Smith, 1981
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
)
- Sinnott, 1935 ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998
- Vascular Plants
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
)
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
)
- Kenrick & Crane, 1997
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
)
- Brongniart, 1843
- Subclass:
Caryophyllidae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Superorder:
Caryophyllanae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Order:
Caryophyllales
(
)
- Perleb, 1826
- Suborder:
Portulacineae
(
)
- Family:
Cactaceae
(
)
- Durande, 1782 ex A.L. de Jussieu, 1789, nom. cons.
- cactus
- Subfamily:
Opuntioideae
(
)
- Genus:
Opuntia
(
)
- P. Miller, 1754
- Pricklypear, nopal [origin uncertain; possibly based on name of Greek town (Opus perhaps) where a cactus-like plant grew]
- Specific epithet:
bigelovii
- Engelm.
- Botanical name: - Opuntia bigelovii Engelm.
- Specific epithet:
bigelovii
- Engelm.
- Genus:
Opuntia
(
- Subfamily:
Opuntioideae
(
- Family:
Cactaceae
(
- Suborder:
Portulacineae
(
- Order:
Caryophyllales
(
- Superorder:
Caryophyllanae
(
- Subclass:
Caryophyllidae
(
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
Synonyms
Cylindropuntia bigelovii (Engelm.) F. M. Knuth
Notes
Name
Status: Accepted Name
.
Last scrutiny: 15-Mar-2000
Similar Species
Members of the genus Opuntia
ZipcodeZoo has pages for 389 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:
O. acanthocarpa (Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow (Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. coloradensis L.Benson (Colorado Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. major (Engelm. & Bigelow) L.Benson (Buckhorn Cholla) · O. acanthocarpa Engelm. & Bigelow var. thornberi (Thornb. & Bonker) L.Benson (Thornber 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. aggeria (Big Bend Pricklypear) · O. alko-tuna (Opuntia) · O. amyclaea (Opuntia) · O. anacantha (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. kiska-loro (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. retrorsa (Opuntia) · O. anacantha var. utikilio (Opuntia) · O. apurimacensis (Opuntia) · O. arbuscula (Arizona Pencil Cholla) · O. arcei (Opuntia) · O. arenaria (El Paso Pricklypear) · O. armata (Opuntia) · O. assumptionis (Opuntia) · O. atrispina (Border Prickly-Pear) · O. atropes (Opuntia) · O. atrovirens (Opuntia) · O. auberi (Lengua De Vaca) · O. aurantiaca (Jointed Prickly Pear) · O. aurea (Creeping Beavertail) · O. aureispina (Golden-Spined Prickly Pear) · O. azurea (Coyotillo) · O. basilaris (Beavertail Cactus) · O. basilaris Engelm. & Bigelow var. basilaris (Beavertail Pricklypear) · O. basilaris Engelm. & Bigelow var. brachyclada (Griffiths) Munz (Beavertail Pricklypear) · O. basilaris Engelm. & Bigelow var. heilii Welsh & Neese (Heil's Beavertail Pricklypear) · O. basilaris Engelm. & Bigelow var. longiareolata (Clover & Jotter) L.Benson (Beavertail Pricklypear) · O. basilaris Engelm. & Bigelow var. treleasei (Coult.) Coult. ex Toumey (Bakersfield Cactus) · O. basilaris var. albiflorus (Beavertail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. basilaris (Beavertail Pricklypear) · O. basilaris var. brachyclada (Short Joint Beaver Tail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. Caudata (Short-Joint Beaver-Tail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. cordata (Beavertail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. heilii (Bevertail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. humistrata (Beavertail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. longiareolata (Beavertail Cactus) · O. basilaris var. treleasei (Treleases Beavertail Prickly Pear) · O. bella (Opuntia) · O. bensonii (Opuntia) · O. bigelovii (Teddy-Bear Cactus) · O. bigelovii var. bigelovii (Teddybear Cholla) · O. bisetosa (Opuntia) · O. boldinghii (Opuntia) · O. bonplandii (Opuntia) · O. borinquensis (Olaga) · O. brasiliensis (Brazil Prickleypear) · O. bravoana (Opuntia) · O. cactaceae (Prickly Pear) · O. californica (Brownspined Pricklypear) · O. californica var. californica (California Pricklypear) · O. californica var. parkeri (Brownspined Pricklypear) · O. cantabrigiensis (Texas Pricklypear) · O. canterae (Opuntia) · O. caracasana (Opuntia) · O. cardiosperma (Joyful Opuntia) · O. chaffeyi (Sacasil) · O. chakensis (Opuntia) · O. charlestonensis (Plateau Prickly Pear) · O. chavena (Opuntia) · O. chihuahuensis (Chihuahua Pricklypear) · O. chisosensis (Chisos Mountain Pricklypear) · O. chlorotica (Dollar-Joint Prickly-Pear) · O. chlorotica Engelm. & Bigelow var. chlorotica Engelm. & J.M.Bigel. (Clockface Prickly-Pear) · O. clavata (Club Cholla) · O. cochabambensis (Opuntia) · O. cochenillifera (Cochineal Cactus) · O. cognata (Opuntia) · O. colubrina (Opuntia) · O. compressa var. compressa (Common Pricklypear) · O. conjungens (Opuntia) · O. corallicola (Florida Semaphore Cactus) · O. cordobensis (Argentine Pricklypear) · O. crassa (Opuntia) · O. crystalenia (Opuntia) · O. cubensis (Bullsuckers) · O. curassavica (Opuntia) · O. curvospina (Searchlight Pricklypear) · O. cymochila (Grassland Pricklypear) · O. darrahiana (Opuntia) · O. deamii (Opuntia) · O. decumbens (Lengua De Vaca) · O. dejecta (Nopal Chamacuero) · O. delaetiana (Opuntia) · O. demissa (Pricklypear) · O. densispina (Big Bend Prickly-Pear) · O. depauperata (Opuntia) · O. depressa (Opuntia) · O. discata (Smallfruit Cactus) · O. discolor (Opuntia)
More Info
- Search for Pictures: images.google.com
- Search for Scholarly Articles: Google Scholar
- Search using Scientific Name and Vernacular Names: All the Web | AltaVista Canada | AltaVista | Excite | Google | HotBot | Lycos
- Search using Specialized Databases: GenBank | Medline | Scirus | CISTI/CAL | Agricola Periodicals | Agricola Books
Further Reading
- 1997 IUCN red list of threatened plants Cambridge: IUCN, World Conservation Union, 1998 url p. 102.
- A flora of California, by Willis Linn Jepson. San Francisco, Calif., Cunningham, Curtis & Welch, 1909- url p. 540.
- Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. Washington: U. S. Govt. Print. Off., 1897- url p. 92.
- Bulletin / Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington: G.P.O., 1901-1971. url p. 234, p. 446.
- Bulletin of the New York Botanical Garden. 6 1908-1910 Lancaster, Pa.: Published for the Garden by the New Era Printing Co., url p. 423.
- Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences. Los Angeles, Calif.: The Academy, 1902-1971. url .
- Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 49 1922 New York: Torrey Botanical Club, 1870-1996 url p. 247.
- California desert trails, by J. Smeaton Chase, with illustrations from photographs by the author, and an appendix of plants, also hints on desert travelling. Boston, Houghton Mifflin company, 1919. url p. 368, p. 369, p. 385.
- Carnegie Institution of Washington publication. Washington, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1902- url , p. 20, p. 22, p. 254, p. 44, p. 58, p. 58, p. 59, p. 59, p. 97, p. V.
- Checklist of CITES Species: a reference to the appendices to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES url p. 272, p. 316.
- Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 16 1912-1916 Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1890- url p. 16, p. 369, p. 449, p. 872, p. XI, p. XIV.
- Desert botanical laboratory of the Carnegie institution, by Frederick Vernon Coville and Daniel Trembly Macdougal. Washington, U.S.A., The Carnegie institution, 1903. url p. 22.
- Memoirs of the San Diego Society of Natural History. 13 1984 San Diego, Calif.: The Society, 1931-1989. url fig. 11, page 22.
- Nature and science on the Pacific coast: a guide-book for scientific travelers in the West / edited under the auspices of the Pacific coast committee of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; illustrated with nineteen text figures, twenty-nine half-tone plates and fourteen San Francisco: P. Elder, [c1915] url p. 175, p. 175.
- Occasional papers - San Diego Society of Natural History. 1963 San Diego, The Society. url p. 32.
- Occasional papers of the California Academy of Sciences. San Francisco: California Academy of Sciences, url p. 18, p. 19, p. 9.
- Our Araby: Palm Springs and the Garden of the sun, by J. Smeaton Chase. Illustrated from photographs by the author: with a descriptive list of desert plants, etc., and Hints to desert motorists: also a new map of the region by the U. S. Geological sur Pasadena, Calif.: Printed for J. S. Chase by Star-news publishing company, 1920. url p. 59.
- Our Araby: Palm Springs and the the Garden of the sun, by J. Smeaton Chase. Illustrated from photographs by the author: with a descriptive list of desert plants, etc., and Hints to desert motorists: also a new map of the region by the U. S. Geological sur Pasadena, Calif., Printed for J. S. Chase by Star-news publishing company, 1920. url p. 59.
- Paulus Roetter sketchbook on pines and cactus, 1852 - 18 url p. 4.
- Proceedings - California Academy of Sciences, 4th series. San Francisco, California Academy of Sciences. url p. 1115, p. 1116.
- Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 4th series. San Francisco, California Academy of Sciences. url p. 1115, p. 1116.
- Proceedings of the San Diego Society of Natural History. 1992 [San Diego, Calif.]: San Diego Society of Natural History, 1990- url p. 24.
- Reports of explorations and surveys, to ascertain the most practicable and economical route for a railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. Made under the direction of the secretary of war, in 1853-[6]. .. 4 1856 Washington, A.O.P. Nicholson, Printer [etc.]1855-60. url p. 56.
- Smithsonian miscellaneous collections. 115 1951 Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1862-1968. url pl. 38, p. 511, p. vii.
- Succulent plants in trade from the wild: analysis of conservation status and international trade UK Dept of the Environment, Transport and Regions url p. 107, p. 64.
- Textbook of botany [by] F.N. Transeau. .. H.C. Sampson. .. [and] L.H. Tiffany. .. New York, Harper & brothers[c1940] url p. 771.
- The Cactaceae, descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family, by N. L. Britton and J. N. Rose. Washington, The Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1919-23. url , p. 58, p. 59.
- The Cactaceae: descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family / by N.L. Britton and J.N. Rose. 1 1919 Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1919-1923. url figs. 69-70 , p. 254, p. 58, p. 59, fig. 68, text figures, page V.
- The Great Basin naturalist. 39 1979 Provo, Utah: M.L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University, 1939-1999. url fig. 5, page 169.
- The Plant world. Baltimore [etc.]Plant World Association [etc.] url , , p. 185, p. 188, p. 296.
- The vegetation of a desert mountain range as conditioned by climatic factors, Washington, D. C., Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1915. url , , , .
- Torreya. Burlington, Vt., Torrey Botanical Club, 1901-1945. url p. 163, p. 165, p. 61.
- Transactions of the San Diego Society of Natural History. 7 1932 [San Diego]: The Society, 1905-1989. url p. 123.
- Use of water by native vegetatation / [prepared by Arthur A. Young and Harry F. Blaney]. Sacramento: California State Printing Office, 1942 url p. 9.
- .Li Zhenyu. 1999. Cactaceae. In: Ku Tsuechih, ed., Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 52(1): 272-285.
- Grant, V. and K. A. Grant. 1979. Systematics of the Opuntia phaeacantha group in Texas. Bot. Gaz. 140: 199-207.
- Parfitt, B. D. and M. A. Baker. 1993. Opuntia. In: J. C. Hickman, ed. 1993. The Jepson Manual. Higher Plants of California. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London. Pp. 452-457.
- Philbrick, R. N. 1963. Biosystematic studies of two Pacific coast opuntias. Ph.D. thesis. Cornell University.
- Pinkava, D. J. 2003. Cactaceae cactus family: Part 6. J. Arizona-Nevada Acad. Sci. 35: 137-150.
Notes
Contributors
- Brands, S.J. (comp.) 1989-present. The Taxonomicon. Universal Taxonomic Services, Zwaag, The Netherlands. Accessed January 9, 2012.
Data Sources
Accessed through GBIF Data Portal November 25, 2007:
- Missouri Botanical Garden, Missouri Botanical Garden
- School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Arizona State University Vascular Plant Herbarium
- Utah State University, USU-UTC Specimen Database
Identifiers
- Biodiversity Heritage Library NamebankID: 2646165
- Catalogue of Life Accepted Name Code: ITS-19694
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility Taxonkey: 13768514
- Globally Unique Identifier: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:136384-1
- Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) Taxonomic Serial Number (TSN): 19694
- Natural Heritage Network Species Identifier: PDCAC0D060
- U.S.D.A. Plant Symbol: OPBI
- Zipcode Zoo Species Identifier: 52568
Footnotes
- 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]
- 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]
