Lemaireocereus hystrix (Haworth) Britton & Rose
Publication Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 12(10): 425 (1909).
Basionyme Cactus hystrix Haworth
"THE GENUS CEREUS AND ITS ALLIES IN NORTH AMERICA.
…
Lemaireocereus hystrix (Salm-Dyck).
Cactus hystrix Salm-Dyck, Obs. Bot. 7. 1822.
Cereus hystrix Salm-Dyck; DC. Prod. 3: 464. 1828.
Distribution: Jamaica; Haiti; Cuba.
Illustration: Journ. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 10: f. 20."
Des mêmes auteurs: The Cactaceae 2: 86-87, fig. 126-128 (1920):
"2. Lemaireocereus hystrix (Haworth) Britton and Rose, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12:425. 1909.
Cactus hystrix Haworth, Suppl. Pl. Succ. 73. 1819.
Cereus hystrix Salm-Dyck, Observ. Bot. 3: 7. 1822.
Echinocactus hystrix Haworth, Phil. Mag. 7: 116. 1830.
Plant often 8 to 12 meters high and then with 10 to 50 erect branches; trunk short, often indefinite, sometimes 3 dm. in diameter; branches 7 to 10 cm. in diameter, with 9 or 10, rarely 12, ribs separated by V-shaped intervals; spines gray with brown tips, acicular, the radials about 10; central spines usually 3, one often longer than the others, often 4 cm. long; flower, including the ovary, 8 to 9 cm. long; tube 5 cm. long, broadly obconic, 3 cm. broad at mouth, spineless, purplish to dark green, bearing a few short broad scales; inner perianth-segments white, spreading or recurved; stamens numerous, erect, white; style white, slender, club-shaped; ovary tuberculate, spineless, bearing small ovate scales; fruit 5 to 6 cm. long, longer than broad, scarlet, covered with clusters of deciduous spines, when mature breaking open and exposing the dark red pulp.
Type locality: West Indies.
Distribution: Dry parts of Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola, and the Porto Rican islands Desecheo and Cayo Muertos.
On the outskirts of Kingston, Jamaica, the stout branches are planted close together, forming a fence or an almost impenetrable hedge about fields, especially along the roadsides.
The flower of this species open at about 7 o'clock in the evening in Jamaica. The style is exserted from the tip of the bud several days before the flower opens, but it seems to be withdrawn before the flower is ready to expand. The flower-tube cuts off from the ovary as is done in Cereus, except that the style comes off with the perianth. Numerous wasps visit the flowers to gather the nectar which oozes from the back of the scales on the flower-tube.
This plant is called Spanish dildos in Jamaica. On hillsides at the United States Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, this cactus occurs in great abundance, forming large colonies, individual plants differing much in the length of their spines, which in some are all less than 1 cm. long.
Illustrations: Journ. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 10: f.20, as Cereus hystrix; Gard. Chron. II 10: 185. f.37; Möllers Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 18:342, as Cereus swartzii.
Figure 126 is from a photograph taken by Marshall A. Howe near Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, in 1909; figure 127 shows a flower collected by William Harris in Jamaica and figure 128 a fruit from the same source.
Here is probably to be referred Descourtilz's plate 419 (Fl. Med. Antill., vol. 6), which he supposed to be Cactus fimbriatus Lamarck. This plate seems to be based largely on Burmann's plate of Plumier 195, f.2. This latter plate was made the type of Haworth's Cereus grandispinus (Phil. Mag. 7: 113. 1930; Pilocereus grandispinus Lemaire, Rev. Hort. 1862: 427. 1862)."
avec complément dans l'Appendix de The Cactaceae 2: 225 (1920):
"Lemaireocereus hystrix. (See page 86, ante.)
Cereus olivaceus, Lemaire, Rev. Hort. IV.8: 643. 1859.
The plant upon which Cereus olivaceus was based came from Santo Domingo.
et dans l'Appendix de The Cactaceae 4: 273 (1923):
"On page 86, vol.II, under Lemaireocereus hystrix, add the synonym: Cactus americanus Vitman, Summa. Pl. 3: 209. 1789.
Insert: Cactus americanus is based on Bradley's illustration (Hist. Succ. Pl. 12) which De Candolle referred to Cereus eburneus, but as the plant came from the West Indies it is perhaps better referred to Lemaireocereus hystrix.
Also insert: We have recently obtained from N. E. Brown a photograph of Haworth's Cereus hystrix, with the date, "Oct. 24. 1824." "
hystrix: du latin hystrix, porc-épic, en référence aux épines.
Fiche créée le 13/12/2004, mise à jour le 04/01/2005.
Basionyme Cactus hystrix Haworth
Synonyme de
Stenocereus fimbriatus (Lamarck) LourteigCommentaires
Publication:"THE GENUS CEREUS AND ITS ALLIES IN NORTH AMERICA.
…
Lemaireocereus hystrix (Salm-Dyck).
Cactus hystrix Salm-Dyck, Obs. Bot. 7. 1822.
Cereus hystrix Salm-Dyck; DC. Prod. 3: 464. 1828.
Distribution: Jamaica; Haiti; Cuba.
Illustration: Journ. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 10: f. 20."
Des mêmes auteurs: The Cactaceae 2: 86-87, fig. 126-128 (1920):
"2. Lemaireocereus hystrix (Haworth) Britton and Rose, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 12:425. 1909.
Cactus hystrix Haworth, Suppl. Pl. Succ. 73. 1819.
Cereus hystrix Salm-Dyck, Observ. Bot. 3: 7. 1822.
Echinocactus hystrix Haworth, Phil. Mag. 7: 116. 1830.
Plant often 8 to 12 meters high and then with 10 to 50 erect branches; trunk short, often indefinite, sometimes 3 dm. in diameter; branches 7 to 10 cm. in diameter, with 9 or 10, rarely 12, ribs separated by V-shaped intervals; spines gray with brown tips, acicular, the radials about 10; central spines usually 3, one often longer than the others, often 4 cm. long; flower, including the ovary, 8 to 9 cm. long; tube 5 cm. long, broadly obconic, 3 cm. broad at mouth, spineless, purplish to dark green, bearing a few short broad scales; inner perianth-segments white, spreading or recurved; stamens numerous, erect, white; style white, slender, club-shaped; ovary tuberculate, spineless, bearing small ovate scales; fruit 5 to 6 cm. long, longer than broad, scarlet, covered with clusters of deciduous spines, when mature breaking open and exposing the dark red pulp.
Type locality: West Indies.
Distribution: Dry parts of Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola, and the Porto Rican islands Desecheo and Cayo Muertos.
On the outskirts of Kingston, Jamaica, the stout branches are planted close together, forming a fence or an almost impenetrable hedge about fields, especially along the roadsides.
The flower of this species open at about 7 o'clock in the evening in Jamaica. The style is exserted from the tip of the bud several days before the flower opens, but it seems to be withdrawn before the flower is ready to expand. The flower-tube cuts off from the ovary as is done in Cereus, except that the style comes off with the perianth. Numerous wasps visit the flowers to gather the nectar which oozes from the back of the scales on the flower-tube.
This plant is called Spanish dildos in Jamaica. On hillsides at the United States Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, this cactus occurs in great abundance, forming large colonies, individual plants differing much in the length of their spines, which in some are all less than 1 cm. long.
Illustrations: Journ. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 10: f.20, as Cereus hystrix; Gard. Chron. II 10: 185. f.37; Möllers Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 18:342, as Cereus swartzii.
Figure 126 is from a photograph taken by Marshall A. Howe near Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, in 1909; figure 127 shows a flower collected by William Harris in Jamaica and figure 128 a fruit from the same source.
Here is probably to be referred Descourtilz's plate 419 (Fl. Med. Antill., vol. 6), which he supposed to be Cactus fimbriatus Lamarck. This plate seems to be based largely on Burmann's plate of Plumier 195, f.2. This latter plate was made the type of Haworth's Cereus grandispinus (Phil. Mag. 7: 113. 1930; Pilocereus grandispinus Lemaire, Rev. Hort. 1862: 427. 1862)."
avec complément dans l'Appendix de The Cactaceae 2: 225 (1920):
"Lemaireocereus hystrix. (See page 86, ante.)
Cereus olivaceus, Lemaire, Rev. Hort. IV.8: 643. 1859.
The plant upon which Cereus olivaceus was based came from Santo Domingo.
et dans l'Appendix de The Cactaceae 4: 273 (1923):
"On page 86, vol.II, under Lemaireocereus hystrix, add the synonym: Cactus americanus Vitman, Summa. Pl. 3: 209. 1789.
Insert: Cactus americanus is based on Bradley's illustration (Hist. Succ. Pl. 12) which De Candolle referred to Cereus eburneus, but as the plant came from the West Indies it is perhaps better referred to Lemaireocereus hystrix.
Also insert: We have recently obtained from N. E. Brown a photograph of Haworth's Cereus hystrix, with the date, "Oct. 24. 1824." "
Étymologie
Lemaireocereus: en l'honneur du botaniste français Charles Lemaire (1800-1871), cierge de Lemaire.hystrix: du latin hystrix, porc-épic, en référence aux épines.
Numéros de collecte
Vous pouvez chercher les numéros de collecte pour cette espèce dans :- la base de Ralph Martin : Lemaireocereus hystrix
- la base de Christophe Ludwig : Lemaireocereus hystrix
Forum
Vous pouvez faire une recherche sur le forum.Auteur
philippe (contacter l'auteur ou écrire aux admins de l'encyclopédie)Fiche créée le 13/12/2004, mise à jour le 04/01/2005.
Fiches de botanistes :
Britton, Nathaniel Lord
Haworth, Adrien Hardy
Rose, Joseph Nelson
Fiche du genre :
Lemaireocereus (Britton & Rose)
Synonymes :
Aucune fiche.
Espèces du même genre :
Lemaireocereus hollianus (F.A.C.Weber) Britton & Rose