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chain-fruit cholla, jumping cholla

Habit Trees 1–3 m; trunk divaricately branching; crown many branched, spreading.
Stem

segments whorled or subwhorled, gray-green, often drying blackish, ± spiny throughout, terminal ones easily dislodged, 6–16(–23) × 2–3.5 cm;

tubercles salient, broadly oval, 0.8–1.3(–1.9) cm;

areoles obdeltate, 5–7(–10) × 2.5–4 mm;

wool gold to tan, aging gray to black.

Spines

0–12(–18) per areole, at most areoles to nearly absent, yellowish, sometimes also pale pinkish, aging brown, interlaced or not with spines of adjacent areoles;

abaxial spines erect to deflexed, spreading, flattened basally, the longest to 3.5 cm;

adaxial spines erect or spreading, terete to subterete, longest to 2.5 cm;

sheaths uniformly whitish, yellowish to golden, baggy.

Glochids

in adaxial tuft, sometimes also scattered along areole margins, yellow, 1–3 mm.

Flowers

inner tepals usually reflexed, pink to magenta, obovate to ligulate, 12–16 mm, apiculate emarginate;

filaments pale pink to magenta;

anthers white to cream;

style pinkish;

stigma lobes whitish to pale yellow.

Fruits

proliferating, forming long, branching, pendent chains, at maturity gray-green, often stipitate, obconic, fleshy, shallowly tuberculate, usually spineless;

basal fruits 32–55 × 23–45 mm;

terminal fruits 2–3.3 × 1.3–2.3 cm;

tubercles becoming obscure;

umbilicus to 8 mm deep;

areoles 18–35.

Seeds

pale yellow to brownish, angular to very irregular in outline, warped, 1.9 × 1.5–3.5 mm, sides with 1–2 large depressions, hilum pointed;

girdle smooth.

Cylindropuntia fulgida

Distribution
from FNA
AZ; nw Mexico
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora).

Intermediates are known between the varieties, which are largely sympatric in northern portion of range of the species.

Cylindropuntia fulgida forms hybrids with C. spinosior (see 6. C. ×kelvinensis) and C. leptocaulis. Hybrids, which are rare in south-central Arizona, have stems of intermediate diameter, (0–)1–5 spines per areole, one spine much longer than others, and spineless, yellowing, and often reddish fruits in chains of four to six, or more.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Spines of stems interlaced with spines of adjacent areoles, the longest usually 2.5-3 cm; sheaths baggy; stem segments appearing spiny from afar, obscuring strongly mammillate tubercles beneath.
var. fulgida
1. Spines of stems not or little interlaced with spines of adjacent areoles, the longest usually 1-2 cm; sheaths tightly fitting; stem segments appearing spineless or nearly so from afar, exposing strongly mammillate tubercles beneath
var. mamillata
Source FNA vol. 4.
Parent taxa Cactaceae > subfam. Opuntioideae > Cylindropuntia
Sibling taxa
C. abyssi, C. acanthocarpa, C. arbuscula, C. bigelovii, C. californica, C. davisii, C. echinocarpa, C. ganderi, C. imbricata, C. kleiniae, C. leptocaulis, C. munzii, C. prolifera, C. ramosissima, C. spinosior, C. tunicata, C. versicolor, C. whipplei, C. wolfii, C. ×kelvinensis, C. ×tetracantha
Subordinate taxa
C. fulgida var. fulgida, C. fulgida var. mamillata
Synonyms Opuntia fulgida
Name authority (Engelmann) F. M. Knuth: in C. Backeberg and F. M. Knuth, Kaktus-ABC, 126. (1935)
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