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old-man-cactus, senita, senita cactus

Habit Shrubs [to small trees], with basal branches sometimes rooting to form thickets.
Stems

green with red around young areoles, aging gray-green with faint waxy chevrons;

ribs somewhat rounded, margins relatively flat;

areoles 1–1.5 cm apart on rib crest, shield-shaped, on proximal stems 1 cm wide, those on distal stems closer together, circular;

young hairs whitish gray, short.

Spines

strongly dimorphic, those on proximal stems usually 7–10 per areole, rose-red, aging gray, stout, usually 5–7 mm, to less than 30 mm, weakly differentiated as central and radial spines, those on distal stems usually more than 15 per areole, gray to blackish (rarely aging copper-brown), thin, flattened, twisted, to 7.5 cm;

bristles 4–10 cm.

Flowers

lateral on stems, often several per areole, on specialized bristle-forming or transition areoles, short funnelform, 3–4.5 × 2–3 cm;

flower tube thin walled, very narrow, less than 1.5 cm;

nectar chamber open;

scales rose with green margins;

tepals spreading, reflexed by morning;

outer tepals somewhat fimbriate, minutely papillate;

inner tepals 25, with pink-orange center, 11–16 mm, apex acute;

stamens 100, white, turning pink by next morning, to 2 cm;

anthers cream;

ovary small, tubercles and spines absent;

styles white, short, narrow;

stigma lobes erect, relatively short.

Fruits

candy-apple red, when immature greenish, ovoid to subspheric, 25–40 mm.

Seeds

helmet-shaped, often with a prominent raphe.

2n

= 22.

Pachycereus schottii

Phenology Flowering late Mar–Sep[-Dec]; fruiting often 1 month after flowering.
Habitat Cercidium-Larrea-Olneya-Carnegiea communities, around washes, on sandy [gravelly] soils
Elevation 400-500 m (1300-1600 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; Mexico (Baja California, Baja California Sur, Sinaloa, Sonora)
[WildflowerSearch map]
Discussion

Pachycereus schottii is primarily a Mexican species occuring in southernmost Arizona only in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument at nine sites very close to the international boundary, where winter temperatures do not generally reach freezing. The Arizona populations do not appear to be experiencing much recruitment via seeds, but persist by vegetative propagation. In Mexico, plant height, rib number, and rib shape vary considerably with microhabitat. In subtropical thorn forest P. schottii may be a small tree with a very short trunk. Three varieties of P. schottii were formally recognized (G. S. Lindsay 1963) but need to be re-examined using DNA techniques. If varieties or subspecies are accepted, Arizona populations would represent the typical form.

In contrast to other species of Pachycereus, P. schottii and its narrowly restricted cousin P. gatesii of Baja California Sur, Mexico have the smallest flowers and seeds and the most fleshy and naked fruits. The flowering portion of each adult stem always has long, grayish bristles, inspiring the anthropomorphic vernacular names referring to old age.

The moth Upiga virescens (Pyralidae) is the obligate pollinator of Pachycereus schottii, forming a mutualistic system comparable with the yucca and yucca moth (J. N. Holland and T. H. Fleming 1999, 1999b; R. S. Folger and A. D. Zimmerman 2000). In populations near the international border, flowers of P. schottii open ten minutes after sunset (J. N. Holland, pers. comm.).

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

Source FNA vol. 4, p. 184.
Parent taxa Cactaceae > subfam. Cactoideae > Pachycereus
Synonyms Cereus schottii, Lophocereus schottii, Pilocereuss chottii
Name authority (Engelmann) D. R. Hunt: Bradleya 5: 93. (1987)
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