:Pediocactus

{{Short description|Genus of cacti}}

{{Italic title}}

{{Automatic taxobox

|taxon =Pediocactus

|image = Pediocactus simpsonii.jpg

|image_caption = Pediocactus simpsonii

|authority = Britton & Rose

|subdivision_ranks = Species

|subdivision =See text

|type_species = Pediocactus simpsonii 

}}

Pediocactus (Greek: πεδίον (pedion) means "plain", "flat", "field") is a genus of cacti native to the Western United States. The genus comprises between 6 and 11 species, depending upon the authority. Species of this genus are referred to as hedgehog cacti, though that name is also applied to plants from the genera Echinocereus and Echinopsis.{{cite web |url=http://cssaustralia.org.au/content/view/72/104/ |title=Echinopsis (Hedgehog Cacti) |access-date=2008-07-29 |publisher=Cactus and Succulent Society of Australia |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080720010527/http://cssaustralia.org.au/content/view/72/104/ |archive-date = 2008-07-20}} Species may also be referred to as pincushion cacti, a common name which is also applied to other genera.

Description

The Pediocactus genus includes small species of cactus that grow either individually or in clusters, reaching heights of up to {{convert|20|cm|sp=us}}. The shoots, which can be green or glaucous, come in cylindrical, spherical, or depressed spherical shapes, with diameters ranging from {{convert|1|to|15|cm|sp=us}} and heights from {{convert|0.7|to|20|cm|sp=us}}. Despite lacking ribs, these shoots have warts measuring {{convert|2|to|12|mm|sp=us}} in length and {{convert|2|to|11|mm|sp=us}} in diameter. The characteristic appearance is contributed to by the areoles, spaced {{convert|1|to|6|mm|sp=us}} apart (occasionally up to {{convert|12|mm|sp=us}}). The shoots also have thorns, varying in number, color, and orientation. There can be up to ten light gray or white central spines, measuring {{convert|0.5|to|3.2|cm|sp=us}}, and three to 35 reddish to whitish marginal spines, which can be straight, curved, or comb-shaped, extending {{convert|0.1|to|2.1|cm|sp=us}} in length.{{cite book | last=Anderson | first=Edward F. | last2=Eggli | first2=Urs | title=Das grosse Kakteen-Lexikon | publisher=Ulmer | publication-place=Stuttgart (Hohenheim) | date=2005 | isbn=3-8001-4573-1 | language=de | page=517}}

The bell-shaped flowers at the top of the shoots come in colors ranging from yellow to magenta to white, with diameters of {{convert|1|to|2.5|cm|sp=us}}. The flowers are characterized by a glabrous or nearly glabrous pericarpel and a short floral tube. Flowering typically occurs in spring, but certain species form buds in late autumn, with some capable of flowering even in their juvenile stages.{{cite book | last=Hochstätter | first=Fritz | title=Tribe Cacteae, Family Cactaceae: The genera Pediocactus Navajoa Toumeya | publisher=Fritz Hochstätter | publication-place=Mannheim | date=2005 | isbn=978-3-00-021244-4 | page=10}}

The fruits, initially greenish and cylindrical to spherical, transform into reddish-brown, dry structures upon ripening. Opening with a vertical gap, the fruits may be bare or possess a few scales. As the fruit opens, the remaining flower partially detaches, leaving a residue resembling a cap. The fruits contain blackish-brown, wrinkled to tuberous, obovate, or pear-shaped seeds. These seeds ripen 4 to 6 weeks after flowering and remain viable for an exceptionally long period, lasting at least 10 years.

Species

{{As of|2025|January}}, Plants of the World Online accepts the following species:

class="wikitable sortable"
ImageScientific nameDistribution
120pxPediocactus bradyi {{small|L.D.Benson}}Northern Arizona{{cite POWO |id=186534-2 |title=Pediocactus bradyi L.D.Benson |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus despainii {{small|S.L.Welsh & Goodrich}}Central Utah{{cite POWO |id=186536-2 |title=Pediocactus despainii S.L.Welsh & Goodrich |access-date=26 January 2025}}
Pediocactus hajekii {{small|Hochstätter}}Southeast Oregon{{cite POWO |id=77328563-1 |title=Pediocactus hajekii Hochstätter |access-date=26 January 2025}}
Pediocactus indranus {{small|(Hochstätter) Hochstätter}}East-northeast Idaho{{cite POWO |id=77318351-1 |title=Pediocactus indranus (Hochstätter) Hochstätter |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus knowltonii {{small|L.D.Benson}}San Juan County, New Mexico{{cite web |last1=New Mexico Rare Plant Technical Council |title=Pediocactus knowltonii (Knowlton Cactus) |url=https://nmrareplants.unm.edu/node/127 |website=New Mexico Rare Plants |access-date=26 January 2025 |date=1999}}
120pxPediocactus nigrispinus {{small|(Hochstätter) Hochstätter}}Idaho, Oregon, Washington{{cite POWO |id=1185753-2 |title=Pediocactus nigrispinus (Hochstätter) Hochstätter |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus paradinei {{small|B.W.Benson}}Arizona{{cite POWO |id=137411-1 |title=Pediocactus paradinei B.W.Benson |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus peeblesianus {{small|(Croizat) L.D.Benson}}Arizona{{cite POWO |id=186542-2 |title=Pediocactus peeblesianus (Croizat) L.D.Benson |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus sileri {{small|(Daul) L.D.Benson}}southwestern Utah and northwestern Arizona{{cite POWO |id=186548-2 |title=Pediocactus sileri (Daul) L.D.Benson |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus simpsonii {{small|(Engelm.) Britton & Rose}}Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming{{cite POWO |id=186549-2 |title=Pediocactus simpsonii (Engelm.) Britton & Rose |access-date=26 January 2025}}
120pxPediocactus winkleri {{small|K.D.Heil}}Central Utah{{cite POWO |id=186555-2 |title=Pediocactus winkleri K.D.Heil |access-date=26 January 2025}}

Synonyms

The genus has 3 synonyms:

Sclerocactus and Pediocactus were also at one time reduced to synonymy, but this is not at present considered to be correct.

References

{{Commons category|Pediocactus|position=left}}

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Category:Cactoideae genera

Category:Cacti of the United States