Mammillaria
Mammillaria is one of the largest genera in the cactus family, with currently 200 known species and varieties recognized. Most of the mammillarias are native to Mexico, but some come from the southwest United States, the Caribbean, Colombia, Venezuela, Guatemala and Honduras. The common name "pincushion cactus" refers to this and the closely related genus Escobaria.
The first species was described by Carl Linnaeus as Cactus mammillaris in 1753, deriving its name from Latin mammilla, "nipple", referring to the tubercles that are among the distinctive features of the genus. Numerous species are commonly known as globe cactus, nipple cactus, fishhook cactus or pincushion cactus though such terms may also be used for related taxa, particularly Escobaria.
Description
The distinctive feature of the genus is the possession of an areole split into two clearly separated parts, one occurring at the of the tubercle, the other at its base. The apex part is spine bearing, and the base part is always spineless, but usually bears 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 with radial symmetry. Tubercles 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 colour, often with a darker mid-stripe; the reddish hues are due to betalain pigments as usual for Caryophyllales. The fruit is berry-like, club-shaped or elongated, usually red but sometimes white, magenta, 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.
var. balsasoides''
Systematics
The genus Mammillaria in the family Cactaceae was proposed by Adrian Hardy Haworth in 1812 and officially recognized by the International Botanical Congress of 1930. Initial spellings varied by authors but Mammillaria is now recognized as the accepted spelling.Mammillaria is a large and diverse genus with many species often exhibiting variations due to the nature of terrain, weather, soil and other ecological factors. As a result, subdivisions within the species has been rather inconsistent over time. Initially, some investigators were more inclined to consider each variation as a unique species, although as time went on, creating confusion and long synonymy-lists for some of the species. Over time, new investigators began grouping closely related forms under the same name to attempt to more accurately define the species.
Several systems for classification began to emerged. The first of note, created by Schumann and modified by Berger, divided the species into ten named groups. However, the criteria for these divisions was somewhat indefinite and flexible. In the early 1923, cactologists Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose developed the Britton & Rose system which arranged the classification characteristics in a system of keys with tangible separation factors, resulting in a much more workable system of identification.
Later classification was performed by the cactus specialists Hunt, Reppenhagen and Luthy, with much work focusing on researching 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 colour 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, which at one time numbered above 500, is now below 200. Some genera have been merged back into Mammillaria, and others like Coryphantha, Escobaria and Mammilloydia were confirmed as separate.
Intense studies of DNA 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 research results, the genus does not seem to be monophyletic 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.
Selected species
As noted above, some might not belong in this genus.- Mammillaria albicoma
- Mammillaria albiflora
- Mammillaria albilanata
- Mammillaria angelensis
- Mammillaria anniana
- Mammillaria aureilanata
- Mammillaria aurihamata
- Mammillaria backebergiana
- Mammillaria barbata - green fishhook cactus
- Mammillaria baumii
- Mammillaria beneckei
- Mammillaria berkiana
- Mammillaria blossfeldiana
- Mammillaria bocasana
- * Mammillaria bocasana f. multilanata - powder-puff pincushion
- * Mammillaria bocasana ssp. eschauzieri - Eschauzier's pincushion
- Mammillaria bombycina - silken pincushion
- Mammillaria boolii
- Mammillaria brachytrichion
- Mammillaria brandegeei
- Mammillaria candida
- Mammillaria carmenae
- Mammillaria carnea
- Mammillaria celsiana
- Mammillaria centricirrha
- Mammillaria columbiana
- Mammillaria compressa - mother of hundreds
- Mammillaria crinita - rose pincushion cactus
- Mammillaria crocidata
- Mammillaria crucigera
- Mammillaria decipiens
- Mammillaria deherdtiana
- Mammillaria dioica - strawberry cactus, California fishhook cactus
- Mammillaria discolor
- Mammillaria dixanthocentron
- Mammillaria duwei
- Mammillaria elegans
- Mammillaria elongata - ladyfinger cactus
- Mammillaria fraileana
- Mammillaria gasseriana
- Mammillaria geminispina - twin-spined cactus
- * Mammillaria geminispina f. cristate - crested twin-spined cactus
- Mammillaria gigantea
- Mammillaria glassii
- Mammillaria glochidiata
- Mammillaria goodridgei
- * Mammillaria goodridgei var. goodridgei
- * Mammillaria goodridgei var. rectispina
- Mammillaria grahamii - Arizona fishhook cactus
- * Mammillaria grahamii var. oliviae - Pitahayita
- Mammillaria grusonii
- Mammillaria guelzowiana
- Mammillaria guerreronis
- Mammillaria guillauminiana
- Mammillaria haageana
- Mammillaria hahniana - old lady cactus
- Mammillaria hernandezii
- Mammillaria herrerae
- Mammillaria heyderi
- Mammillaria huitzilopochtli
- Mammillaria humboldtii
- Mammillaria johnstonii
- Mammillaria karwinskiana - royal cross mammillaria
- Mammillaria klissingiana
- Mammillaria kraehenbuehlii
- Mammillaria krameri
- Mammillaria lasiacantha - golf-ball pincushion cactus
- Mammillaria lauii
- Mammillaria lenta
- Mammillaria longiflora
- Mammillaria longimamma - finger cactus
- Mammillaria luethyi
- Mammillaria magnifica
- Mammillaria magnimamma - Mexican pincushion
- Mammillaria mainiae - counterclockwise pincushion
- Mammillaria mammillaris
- Mammillaria marcosii
- Mammillaria marksiana - cabeza de viejo
- Mammillaria mathildae
- Mammillaria matudae
- Mammillaria meiacantha
- Mammillaria melaleuca
- Mammillaria melanocentra
- Mammillaria mercadensis
- Mammillaria microhelia
- Mammillaria microthele
- Mammillaria muehlenpfordtii
- Mammillaria morganiana
- Mammillaria multidigitata
- Mammillaria mystax
- Mammillaria neopalmeri
- Mammillaria nivosa - woolly nipple cactus
- Mammillaria nunezii
- Mammillaria painteri
- Mammillaria parkinsonii - owl's eyes
- Mammillaria pectinifera - conchilinque
- Mammillaria pennispinosa
- Mammillaria perbella
- Mammillaria perezdelarosae
- Mammillaria petrophila
- Mammillaria petterssonii
- Mammillaria plumosa - feather cactus
- Mammillaria polythele
- Mammillaria pondii
- Mammillaria poselgeri
- Mammillaria pottsii - rattail cactus
- Mammillaria prolifera - Texas nipple cactus
- Mammillaria rekoi
- Mammillaria rettigiana
- Mammillaria rhodantha - rainbow pincushion
- Mammillaria saboae
- Mammillaria sanchez-mejoradae
- Mammillaria sartorii
- Mammillaria schiedeana
- Mammillaria schumannii
- Mammillaria schwarzii
- Mammillaria sempervivi
- Mammillaria senilis - a.k.a. Cochemiea senilis, a.k.a. Mamillopsis senilis, a.k.a. Mamillopsis diguetii, a.k.a. Mammillaria diguetii
- Mammillaria sheldonii - Sheldon's pincushion
- Mammillaria sonorensis
- Mammillaria sphaerica - longimamma nipple cactus
- Mammillaria spinosissima - red-headed Irishman
- * Mammillaria spinosissima ssp. pilcayensis - bristle brush cactus
- Mammillaria standleyi
- Mammillaria stella-de-tacubaya
- Mammillaria supertexta
- Mammillaria surculosa
- Mammillaria tetrancistra - California pincushion
- Mammillaria theresae
- Mammillaria thornberi - clustered fishhook pincushion
- Mammillaria uncinata
- Mammillaria vetula
- Mammillaria voburnensis
- Mammillaria weingartiana
- Mammillaria wiesingeri
- Mammillaria winterae
- Mammillaria wrightii - brown pincushion
- * Mammillaria wrightii ssp. wilcoxii - Wilcox's nipple cactus
- Mammillaria zeilmanniana
Distribution