Melocactus

Melocactus (melon cactus), also known as the Turk's cap cactus, or Pope's head cactus, is a genus of cactus with about 30–40 species. They are native to the Caribbean, western Mexico through Central America to northern South America, with some species along the Andes down to southern Peru, and a concentration of species in northeastern Brazil.[1]

Melocactus
M. acipinosus
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Cactaceae
Subfamily: Cactoideae
Genus: Melocactus
Link & Otto
Type species
Melocactus communis (now Melocactus intortus)
Species

See text.

The first species was named by Carl Linnaeus in 1753, as Cactus melocactus. When the genus was separated from Cactus, the pre-Linnaean name Melocactus was used. Acting on the principle of priority, in 1922 Nathaniel Britton and Joseph Rose resurrected Linnaeus' Cactus. However, the 1905 Vienna botanical congress had already rejected the name Cactus, so this name was not available, and Melocactus Link & Otto is the correct genus name.[1]

Melocactus plant in fruit.
A Melocactus plant in fruit.

Mature plants are easily recognizable by their cephalium, a wool- and bristle-coated structure at the apex of the plant, containing a mass of areoles from which the small flowers grow.[1] The red, wool-coated cephalium, said to resemble the fez worn by Turkish men during the late Ottoman Empire, gives the plant one of its common names, Turk's cap cactus. It gives its name to the Turks Islands, part of the Turks and Caicos Islands.[2][3]

The fruits of Melocactus are pink and resemble the shape of pepper fruits. The fruits of this genus are edible, and in the wild they are frequently dispersed by lizards and birds.[4]

Species

As of February 2020, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species:[5]

ImageScientific nameDistribution
Melocactus andinus R.Gruber ex N.P.TaylorVenezuela
Melocactus azureus Buining & BrederooBrazil (Bahia)
Melocactus bahiensis (Britton & Rose) Luetzelb.Brazil (Bahia)
Melocactus bellavistensis Rauh & Backeb.Ecuador and Peru
Melocactus braunii EstevesBrazil (Bahia)
Melocactus brederooianus BuiningBrazil (Bahia)
Melocactus broadwayi (Britton & Rose) A.BergerTrinidad & Tobago
Melocactus caroli-linnaei N.P.TaylorJamaica.
Melocactus conoideus Buining & BrederooBrazil.
Melocactus curvispinus Pfeiff.Mexico, Central America, Colombia and western Venezuela
Melocactus deinacanthus Buining & BrederooBrazil.
Melocactus ernestii VaupelBrazil (Bahia and Minas Gerais.)
Melocactus estevesii P.J.BraunBrazil (Roraima)
Melocactus glaucescens Buining & BrederooBrazil.
Melocactus harlowii (Britton & Rose) VaupelCuba
Melocactus inconcinnus Buining & BrederooBrazil (S. Bahia).
Melocactus intortus (Mill.) Urb.Bahamas to Turks-Caicos Islands, Puerto Rico to Lesser Antilles.
Melocactus lanssensianus P.J.BraunBrazil (Pernambuco).
Melocactus lemairei (Monv. ex Lem.) Miq. ex Lem.Hispaniola (NW. Haiti, W. & S. Dominican Republic).
Melocactus levitestatus Buining & BrederooCentral & E. Brazil.
Melocactus macracanthos (Salm-Dyck) Link & OttoAruba to Netherlands Antilles.
Melocactus matanzanus LeónCuba.
Melocactus mazelianus RíhaE. Colombia to Venezuela.
Melocactus neoviridescens GuiggiNE. Brazil.
Melocactus neryi K.Schum.Venezuela to N. Brazil.
Melocactus oreas Miq.Brazil.
Melocactus pachyacanthus Buining & BrederooBrazil.
Melocactus paucispinus Heimen & R.J.PaulBahia, Brazil
Melocactus peruvianus VaupelPeru.
Melocactus pruinosus Werderm.Brazil (Bahia, Minas Gerais).
Melocactus salvadorensis Werderm.Brazil (S. Bahia, Minas Gerais).
Melocactus schatzlii H.Till & R.GruberVenezuela (Mérida).
Melocactus sergipensis N.P.Taylor & MeiadoBrazil (Sergipe).
Melocactus smithii (Alexander) Buining ex G.D.RowleyBrazil.
Melocactus stramineus SuringarAruba.
Melocactus violaceus Pfeiff.NE. Brazil (to NE. Minas Gerais).
Melocactus zehntneri (Britton & Rose) Luetzelb.NE. Brazil

Natural Hybrids

ImageScientific nameDistribution
Melocactus × horridus Werderm.Brazil (Pernambuco).
Melocactus × albicephalus Buining & BrederooBrazil (Bahia)

References

  1. Anderson, Edward F. (2001), The Cactus Family, Pentland, Oregon: Timber Press, ISBN 978-0-88192-498-5, pages=456–467
  2. Archived June 9, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Coastal Lake-Sediment Records of Prehistoric Hurricane Strikes in Honduras and Turks and Caicos Islands of the Caribbean Basin" (PDF). googleusercontent.com. Archived from the original on 2010-07-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  4. Thomson, George (2008). Melocactus: care and cultivation. p. 13.
  5. "Melocactus Link & Otto". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 2020-02-16.


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