Mammillaria meiacantha
Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 3: 263. 1856.
Plants unbranched. Roots short, obconic taproots; secondary-roots diffuse. Stems flat-topped (in old age or under dense brush aerial portion of stem hemispheric), 10 × 8–10 (–30) cm, firm; tubercles 8–17 × 4–11 mm; axils bearing (at least seasonally) woolly tufts, wool 3–5 mm, bristles absent; cortex and pith not mucilaginous; latex abundant in healthy tissue throughout cortex of stem, tubercles, and sometimes flower receptacle, sticky, white. Spines (6–) 7–8 (–10) per areole, white, reddish-brown, gray, or yellowish, glabrous; radial spines (5–) 6–7 (–9) per areole, largest spines reddish-brown, gray, or yellowish, tips blackish or dark-brown, needlelike, 6.5–13.5 × 0.3–0.6 mm, stiff; central spines (0–) 1 per areole, usually ascending and inconspicuous against radial spines, sometimes porrect, straight or slightly curved, largest spines (3–) 5–12 × 0.3–0.7 mm; subcentral spines 0. Flowers 2.5–3.5 × 1.9–3.5 (–4.4) cm; outermost tepal margins entire; inner tepals white to pale-pink, often with pink or lavender midstripes, 8–15 mm; stigma lobes light green, 3–5 mm. Fruits purplish-pink, clavate to obovoid, 20–32 mm, juicy only in fruit walls; floral remnant weakly persistent. Seeds reddish-brown, 1.1–1.2 mm; pitted; testa leathery to hard, anticlinal cell-walls strongly undulate, interstices much narrower than pit diam., pits deeply concave, elongate. 2n = 22.
Phenology: Flowering Mar–May(-Jun); fruiting Oct–Mar.
Habitat: Great Plains grasslands, pine-oak woodlands, ecotone between Chihuahuan desert scrub adjacent more mesic habitats
Elevation: 900-2500 m
Distribution
N.Mex., Tex., Mexico
Discussion
Mammillaria meiacantha is regionally sympatric with both varieties of M. heyderi, without resulting in hybridization. West of the Rio Grande, reports of M. meiacantha probably are misidentifications of M. heyderi var. bullingtoniana. Mammillaria meiacantha has not been documented for Arizona.
Selected References
None.