Abstract

Boke, Norman H. (U. Oklahoma, Norman.) Endomorphic and ectomorphic characters in Pelecyphora and Encephalocarpus. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(3) : 197-209. Illus. 1959.—Outstanding ectomorphic characters of Pelecyphora valdeziana include its small size; pectinate, hairy spines; broad, truncate, floral buds; dehiscent, berry-like fruits; and black, tuberculate seeds. The leaves are vestigial, and although the areole meristem originates on the adaxial face of the tubercle primordium, it is soon elevated to the summit by intercalary growth. The first primordium of the single, elliptical series of spines is initiated immediately in front of the rudimentary leaf. Others form in acropetal sequence on either side of the areole meristem. The last ones form across the areole, leaving a meristem, which may be floral or vegetative, on the anterior side. Whether areoles of P. valdeziana can be considered dimorphic is doubtful. However, they approach the type of dimorphism found in Epithelantha. Pelecyphora aselliformis has acuminate floral buds; dry, papery fruits; and brown, curved, reticulate seeds. The leaves are reduced almost to extinction. The areole meristem becomes separated into spiniferous and axial portions early in ontogeny, but the 2 parts remain connected by a band of trichomes, which probably represents a vestigial groove. The axial meristem may be reproductive or vegetative. The sequence of spine initiation in P. aselliformis is unusual in that it begins at the anterior side of the spiniferous meristem and proceeds toward the posterior side. Areoles in this species are clearly dimorphic, much as in the mammillarias, but the vestigial groove is reminiscent of Coryphantha and related genera. Although adult specimens of Encephalocarpus strobiliformis bear scale-like tubercles, which are very different from the laterally compressed tubercles of P. aselliformis, their flowers, fruits, and seeds are almost identical. The two species share the same type of areole dimorphism, including the vestigial groove. Tubercles on seedlings and young branches of E. strobiliformis are prismatic rather than scale-like. Since they tend to be laterally compressed at the summit and bear elliptical areoles with many more spines than the adult, they resemble seedling tubercles of P. aselliformis. Tubercles on adult specimens likewise resemble each other in the structure of the epidermis and hypodermis. It does not seem possible that P. valdeziana can be retained in the genus Pelecyphora. If seed structure has any systematic value, the species belongs in or near the genus Thelocactus, to which it was assigned by Bravo. Pelecyphora aselliformis and Encephalocarpus strobiliformis, on the other hand, share so many important characters that they could well be considered cogeneric. Both seed structure and the rudimentary grooves on the tubercles suggest that their affinities may lie with certain coryphanthas or mammillarias rather than with Ariocarpus and Epithelantha.

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