Echinocactus myriostigma
Cact. Hort. Dyck. (1849) ed. I. 22; ed. II 29, 155.
Family
Cactaceae
Genus
Species
Echinocactus myriostigma
Author
(Lem.) Salm-Dyck
Chinese genus
金琥属
Chinese name
-
Primary
Accepted
DescriptionEdit description
Seeds
Dark brown, helmet-shaped, shining, with a large depressed hilum, the margins being turned in.
Description
Astrophytum myriostigmaSN|1845]]SN|1845]] (many dotted) is a spineless succulent plant, usually solitary or with very few basal branches. A transverse section of the stem reveal a perfect star shaped form (like the common star-fish) giving the plant the appearance of a bishop's mitre (hence the common name Bishop's cap)
Roots
Fine, fibrous.
Flowers
Funnelform, 4-7 cm long glossy yellow and sweet scented from the areole at the tip of the stem on mature plant. Outer perianth segments narrow, with brown scarious tips. Inner perianth segments numerous, oblong yellow with a silky shine. Scales on ovary tube scaroious, imbricated, very narrow often bristly tipped, with long wool in their axil.
Blooming Season
A. myriostigma seems to flower independently of day length, flowering asynchronously and intermittently throughout the warm months from the end of winter to the start of autumn. Plants may take up to six years to flower.
Spines
Wanting.
Ribs
Usually 5, sometimes 4(or 3) that increase to eight or more with age ( rarely even 10), vertical, regular, deep, prominent, very broad and acute.
Stem
Globular to cylindric up to 60(-100) cm tall (but occasionally up 150 cm tall) and 10-20 cm in diameter, bright green, covered with many minute white hairy scales that give it a characteristic chalk-white or silvery-grey appearance, but sometime naked. The scales are composed of very fine interwoven hairs, which, under a microscope, are very pretty object.
Fruits
2-2,5 cm in diameter, greenish to tannish-red, covered with brown, overlapping scales, with long wool in their axil.
Areoles
Closed together