Harrisia bonplandii is a species of cactus. The cactus plants in the Gran Chaco (Paraguay, Argentina, Bolivia) are generally called tuna and this specific variety reina de la noche (queen of the night). Fruits and roots are edible and well known to the native nations of the Gran Chaco.
Harrisia bonplandii | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Order: | Caryophyllales |
Family: | Cactaceae |
Subfamily: | Cactoideae |
Genus: | Harrisia |
Species: | H. bonplandii
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Binomial name | |
Harrisia bonplandii (Parm.) Britton & Rose
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Synonyms | |
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Names of this cactus in the different languages of the native Nations are: Ayoreo Nation: daturirai / datura; Enxet Nation: laapang; Nivaclé Nation: sôtôyuc. In Argentina it is also known as pasacana/ulua. The plant remains often unnoticed in the forest, but can not be overseen when it blossoms only in the night and where its Spanish name originates.[1]
The name bonplandii honors the French scientist Aimé Bonpland.[2]
Description
editHarrisia bonplandii is stem scandent, clambering or sprawling and grows up leaning-climbing. The stems have diameters of up to 5 centimeters and are up to 2.5 meters long. They are three to four edged with flat faces. Their edges are sharp and wavy. The single strong central spine is up to 2.5 centimeters long. The four to five side spines reach a length of 4 to 5 millimeters The flowers reach a length of 20 to 25 centimeters Their pericarpel and the corolla tube are virtually without wool, but filled with large scurf’s. The spherical, redfruits are edible and strongly tuberculate. They have diameters of 4 to 4.5 centimetres.
Distribution
editHarrisia bonplandii can be found in the southwest of Brasil, in Paraguay, in Bolivia and in the north of Argentina in the Chaco at elevations of 80–900 meters.[3]
Taxonomy
editThe first description as Cereus bonplandii was realized at 1837 from Ludwig Georg Karl Pfeiffer.[4] Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose classified the type in 1920 as Genus Harrisia.[5] Nomenclature synonyms are Eriocereus bonplandii (J.Parm. & Pfeiff.) Riccob. (1909) and Harrisia pomanensis subsp. bonplandii (J.Parm. & Pfeiff.) P.J.Braun & Esteves (1994, not the correct Name ICBN-Artikel 11.4).
References
edit- ^ Friesen Ratzlaff, Verena(2004). Urunde´y - Schlorrekaktus - Pehen, Una guia para plantas leñosas del Chaco, Ein Feldführer für Chacogehölze, p. 29 ISBN 3-9807409-2-7
- ^ Urs Eggli, Leonard E. Newton: Etymological Dictionary of Succulent Plant Names. Springer, Berlin/Heidelberg 2010, ISBN 978-3-642-05597-3, S. 28.
- ^ Franck, Alan R. (2016). "MONOGRAPH OF HARRISIA" (PDF). Phytoneuron. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
- ^ Enumeratio Diagnostica Cactearum hucusque Cognitarum. Berlin 1837, S. 108 (online).
- ^ N. L. Britton; J. N. Rose (1920), The Cactaceae. Descriptions and Illustrations of Plants of the Cactus Family (online) (in German), vol. Band II, Washington: The Carnegie Institution of Washington, pp. 157–158
Literature
edit- Edward F. Anderson (2005), Das große Kakteen-Lexikon (in German), Urs Eggli (trans.), Stuttgart: Eugen Ulmer KG, p. 338, ISBN 3-8001-4573-1
External links
edit- Media related to Harrisia bonplandii at Wikimedia Commons
- Data related to Harrisia bonplandii at Wikispecies