Mammillaria standleyi[2] is a species of the family Cactaceae native to the Sierra Madre Occidental of Sinaloa, Chihuahua and Sonora. It has red-purple flowers surrounded by cottony pubescence. Fruits are red and edible, tasting like apples, although too small to be of much food value to humans.[3]
Synonyms
-
Mammillaria standleyi (Britt. & Rose) Orcutt, Cactography 8. 1926
-
Neomammillaria standleyi Britt. & Rose, Cact. 4: 97. 1923.[4]
-
Mammillaria auricantha R.T. Craig, Mammill. Handbook 301, fig. 272. 1945.[5]
-
Mammillaria auritricha R.T. Craig, Mammill. Handbook 302, fig. 273. 1945
-
Mammillaria laneusumma R.T. Craig, Mammill. Handbook 310, fig. 282. 1945
-
Mammillaria mayensis R.T. Craig, Mammill. Handbook 116, fig. 97. 1945
-
Mammillaria montensis R.T. Craig, Mammill. Handbook 311, fig. 284. 1945.
-
Mammillaria craigii G.E. Linds., Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 303. 1942.[6]
-
Mammillaria sonorensis Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (US) 12(10): 155. 1940.[7]
-
Mammillaria sonorensis var brevispina Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 12: 156, fig 1940
-
Mammillaria sonorensis var gentryi Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 12: 156, fig 1940
-
Mammillaria sonorensis var hiltonii Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 12: 156, fig 1940
-
Mammillaria sonorensis var longispina Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 12: 156, fig 1940
-
Mammillaria sonorensis var maccartyi Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 12: 156, fig 1940
-
Mammillaria tesopacensis Craig, Mammill. Handbook 104, fig. 86. 1945
-
Mammillaria xanthina (Britton & Rose) Boed., Mammillarien-Vergleichs-Schluessel 47. 1933.[8]
-
Neomammillaria xanthina Britton & Rose, Cactaceae (Britton & Rose) 4: 164. 1923
-
Chilita xanthina (Britton & Rose) Orcutt, Cactography 2. 1926.[9]
-
Mammillaria bellisiana Craig, Mammill. Handb. 304 (1945)
-
Mammillaria movensis Craig, Mammill. Handb. 312, fig. 285 1945
-
Mammillaria tinuvieliae Laferr., J. Mammillaria Soc. 38(2): 21, fig. 1998[10]
-
Mammillaria floresii Fritz Schwarz, Blätt. Sukkulentenk. 1: 5. 1949.[11]
References
-
^ "The Plant List: a Working List of All Plant Species".
-
^ Orcutt, Cactography 8. 1926
-
^ Laferrière, Joseph E., Charles W. Weber and Edwin A. Kohlhepp. 1991a. Use and nutritional composition of some traditional Mountain Pima plant foods. Journal of Ethnobiology 11(1):93-114.
-
^ Britton & Rose, Cact. 4: 97. 1923
-
^ R.T. Craig. 1945. Mammillaria Handbook. Abbey Garden Press.
-
^ Lindsay, Cact. Succ. J. (Los Angeles) 303. 1942.
-
^ Craig, Cact. Succ. J. (US) 12(10): 155. 1940.
-
^ Boed., Mammillarien-Vergleichs-Schluessel 47. 1933.
-
^ Orcutt, Cactography 2. 1926.
-
^ Laferriere, J. Mammillaria Soc. 38(2): 21, fig. 1998
-
^ Fritz Schwarz, Blätt. Sukkulentenk. 1: 5. 1949.