MAMMILLARIA


The genus '''Mammillaria''' is one of the largest in the cactus family Cactaceae, with currently 171 known species and varieties recognized . The first was described by Carolus Linnaeus as ''Cactus mammillaris'' in 1753, deriving name from Latin ''mammilla'' = nipple, referring to the tubercules that are one of the plant's specific features. In 1812, the cactus specialist Adrian Haworth described the genus ''Mammillaria'' to contain this and related species.
The distinctive feature of the genus is the specific development of an areole, that is split into two clearly separated parts, one occurring at the tubercule's apex, the other at its base. The apex part is spine bearing, and the base part is always spineless, but usually bearing some bristles or wool. The base part of the areole bears the flowers and fruits, and is a branching point. The apex part of the areole does not carry flowers, but in certain conditions can function as a branching point as well.
The plants are usually small, globose to elongated, the stems from 1 cm to 20 cm in diameter and from 1 cm to 40 cm tall, clearly tuberculate, solitary to clumping forming mounds of up to 100 heads and posses radial symmetry. Tubercules can be conical, cylindrical, pyramidal or round. The roots are fibrous, fleshy or tuberous. The flowers are funnel-shaped and range from 7 mm to 40 mm and more in length and in diameter, from white and greenish to yellow, pink and red in color, often with a darker mid-stripe. The fruit is berry-like, club-shaped or elongated, usually red but sometimes white, yellow or green. Some species have the fruit embedded into the plant body. The seeds are black or brown, from 1 to 3 mm in size.
Mammillarias have extremely variable spination from species to species, and attractive flowers, making them specifically attractive for cactus hobbyists. Mammillaria plants are considered easy in cultivation, though some species are among the hardest cacti to grow.
Most of the mammillarias are native to Mexico, but some come from the southwest USA, the Caribbean, Colombia, Venezuela, Guatemala and Honduras.

Contents
Classification
Synonymy
Species List
References
External links

Classification


The large and diverse genus ''Mammillaria'' has seen multiple attempts to subdivide the species in it into smaller groups within the genus or attempts to split it to multiple genera for better understanding of the plants relationship. Early classifications were performed by Pfeiffer (1837), Salm-Dick (1845) and Engelmann (1856). The genus ''Mammillaria'' included members of some modern genera like ''Coryphanta'' and ''Ariocarpus'' at that time. Classifications by Schumann (1898), Britton and Rose (1923), Berger (1929), Buxbaum (1951-56) and Moran (1953) followed, splitting the genus in parts and combining it back together again.
Later classification was performed by the cactus specialists Hunt, Reppenhagen and Luthy , with a lot of work focusing on searching the meanings and value of the original plant descriptions, synchronizing them with modern taxonomic requirements and studying the morphology of plants and seeds, as well as ecological aspects of the genus. These works helped to expand the understanding of ''Mammillaria'' taxa.
Currently the classification of ''Mammillaria'' is in a state where few newly discovered species are likely, though some new species may yet be found when the chaos of names created earlier by commercial plant collectors is sorted out. Many names that were introduced for plants barely differentiated by a shade of flower color or variation in spination were eliminated in attempt to make the use of names consistent with the rest of the botanical world. The number of taxa, at one time way over 500, is now is below 200. Some genera (''Dolichothele, Mammillopsis, Krainzia'' and others) have been merged back into ''Mammillaria'', and others like ''Coryphantha and Escobaria'' were confirmed as separate.
Intense DNA studies of the genus are being conducted, with preliminary results published for over a hundred taxa, and this promising approach might soon end the arguments. Based on DNA results, the genus does not seem to be monophylic and is likely to be split into two large genera, one of them possibly including certain species of other closely related genera like ''Coryphantha, Ortegocactus'' and ''Neolloydia''.
Synonymy

''Mammillaria magnimamma'' in flower.

Mammillariae. ''Mammillaria celsiana'' in the middle.

''Mammillaria tetrancisra'' with fruit.

''Mammillaria luethyi'' detail.

The following genera have been brought to synonymy with ''Mammillaria'':

★ '''Bartschella''' Britton & Rose

★ '''Cactus''' L.

★ '''Chilita''' Orcutt

★ '''Cochemiea''' (K.Brandegee) Walton

★ '''Dolichothele''' (K.Schum.) Britton & Rose

★ '''Ebnerella''' Buxb.

★ '''Haagea''' Fric

★ '''Krainzia''' Backeb.

★ '''Lactomammillaria''' Fric (nom. inval.)

★ '''Leptocladia''' Buxb.

★ '''Leptocladodia''' Buxb.

★ '''Mamillaria''' F.Rchb. (orth. var.)

★ '''Mamillopsis''' (E.Morren) F.A.C.Weber ex Britton & Rose

★ '''Mammariella''' Shafer (nom. inval.)

★ '''Mammilaria''' Torr. & A.Gray (orth. var.)

★ '''Neomammillaria''' Britton & Rose

★ '''Oehmea''' Buxb.

★ '''Phellosperma''' Britton & Rose

★ '''Porfiria''' Boed.

★ '''Pseudomammillaria''' Buxb.

★ '''Solisia''' Britton & Rose

Species List


171 species known, including:

★ ''Mammillaria albicoma''

★ ''Mammillaria albilanata''

★ ''Mammillaria angelensis''

★ ''Mammillaria backegergiana''

★ ''Mammillaria barbata'' (Green Fishhook Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria blossfeldiana''

★ ''Mammillaria bocasana'' (Snowball Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria bocasana f. multilanata (Powder-puff Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria bocasana subsp. eschauzieri (Eschauzier's Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria bombycina'' (Silken Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria boolii''

★ ''Mammillaria carmenae''

★ ''Mammillaria candida'' (Snowball Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria celsiana''

★ ''Mammillaria columbiana''

★ ''Mammillaria compressa'' (Mother of Hundreds)

★ ''Mammillaria crinita'' (Rose Pincushion Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria crucigera''

★ ''Mammillaria decipiens''

★ ''Mammillaria dioica'' (Strawberry Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria discolor''

★ ''Mammillaria dixanthocentron''

★ ''Mammillaria elongata'' (Ladyfinger Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria fraileana''

★ ''Mammillaria geminispina'' (Twin-Spined Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria geminispina f. cristate'' (Crested Twin-Spined Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria glassii''

★ ''Mammillaria glochidiata''

★ ''Mammillaria grahamii'' (Arizona Fishhook Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria grahamii var. oliviae'' Pitahayita

★ ''Mammillaria grusonii''

★ ''Mammillaria guelzowiana''

★ ''Mammillaria guerreronis''

★ ''Mammillaria haageana''

★ ''Mammillaria hahniana'' (Old Lady Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria hernandezii''

★ ''Mammillaria herrerae''

★ ''Mammillaria heyderi'' (Ball Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria huitzilopochtli''

★ ''Mammillaria humboldtii''

★ ''Mammillaria johnstonii''

★ ''Mammillaria karwinskiana'' (Royal Cross Mammillaria)

★ ''Mammillaria klissingiana''

★ ''Mammillaria krameri''

★ ''Mammillaria lasiacantha'' (Golf-ball Pincushion Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria lauii''

★ ''Mammillaria lenta''

★ ''Mammillaria longiflora''

★ ''Mammillaria longimamma'' (Finger Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria longimamma var. sphaerica'' (Longmamma Nipple Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria magnifica''

★ ''Mammillaria magnihahha''

★ ''Mammillaria mainiae'' (Counterclockwise Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria magnimamma'' (Mexican Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria marksiana'' (Cabeza de Viejo)

★ ''Mammillaria matudae''

★ ''Mammillaria melaleuca''

★ ''Mammillaria melanocentra''

★ ''Mammillaria mercadensis''

★ ''Mammillaria microhelia''

★ ''Mammillaria muehlenpfordtii''

★ ''Mammillaria multidigitata''

★ ''Mammillaria mystax''

★ ''Mammillaria nivosa'' (Woolly Nipple Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria nunezii''

★ ''Mammillaria parkinsonii'' (Owl's Eyes)

★ ''Mammillaria pectinifera'' (Conchilinque)

★ ''Mammillaria perbella''

★ ''Mammillaria perezdelarosae''

★ ''Mammillaria petrophila''

★ ''Mammillaria petterssonii''

★ ''Mammillaria plumosa'' (Feather Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria polythele''

★ ''Mammillaria pottsii'' (Rattail Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria prolifera (Texas Nipple Cactus)

★ ''Mammillaria rekoi''

★ ''Mammillaria rhodantha'' (Rainbow Cushion)

★ ''Mammillaria saboae''

★ ''Mammillaria sanchez-mejoradae''

★ ''Mammillaria sartorii''

★ ''Mammillaria schiedeana''

★ ''Mammillaria schumannii''

★ ''Mammillaria sempervivi''

★ ''Mammillaria sheldonii'' (Sheldon's Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria sonorensis''

★ ''Mammillaria spinosissima'' (Red Headed Irishman)

★ ''Mammillaria spinosissima subsp. pilcayensis'' Bristle Brush Cactus

★ ''Mammillaria standleyi''

★ ''Mammillaria supertexta''

★ ''Mammillaria surculosa''

★ ''Mammillaria tetrancistra'' (California Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria theresae''

★ ''Mammillaria thornberi'' (Clustered Fish-Hook Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria uncinata''

★ ''Mammillaria vetula''

★ ''Mammillaria voburnensis''

★ ''Mammillaria winterae''

★ ''Mammillaria wrightii'' (Brown Pincushion)

★ ''Mammillaria wrightii subsp. wilcoxii'' (Wilcox's Nipple Cactus)

References


The species list is reproduced from cactiguide.com, which is sourced in turn from several books which are listed on that site. The principal book listed there is ''The Cactus Family'' by Edward F. Anderson.

External links


The important up-to-date internet resource is mammillarias.net, with complete species and varieties description, distribution maps and a large selection of photographs of all ''Mammillaria.. species both in nature and cultivated.

Butterworth, Charles A. and Robert S. Wallace. 2004. Phylogenetic studies of ''Mammillaria'' (Cactaceae)—insights from chloroplast sequence variation and hypothesis testing using the parametric bootstrap. ''American Journal of Botany'' 91: 1086-1098.

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