Neolloydia

Britton & Rose

Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 49: 251. 1922.

Etymology: Greek neos, new, and the genus name Lloydia, for Francis Ernest Lloyd, 1868–1947, Canadian botanist
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 237. Mentioned on page 99, 193, 221.
 TaxonIllustrator 
FNA4 P39 Neolloydia conoidea var conoidea.jpegNeolloydia conoidea var. conoidea
Epithelantha micromeris var. micromeris
Ariocarpus fissuratus var. fissuratus
John Myers
John Myers
John Myers

Plants erect, branched or unbranched, not deep-seated in substrate. Roots diffuse. Stems unsegmented, gray-green to yellowish or bronze-tinted green, spheric to short cylindric, 5–10 (–24) × (1.8–) 2.5–6.5 (–8) cm, usually white woolly at apex; tubercles prominent, not confluent into ribs, tightly packed in vertical, sprialing rows as if tuberculate ribs, compressed conic, 7–12 × 4–7 mm, 8–18 mm diam. at base; areoles adaxially elongated into long, narrow, conspicuous grooves extending into axils of tubercles, usually short woolly; areolar glands absent; cortex and pith not mucilaginous; specialized, yellow, sticky layer beneath old bark. Spines 9–17 [–26] per areole, white, gray, brown, or black, acicular, straight; radial spines 9–15 [–25] per areole, with bulbous bases, 6–17 mm; central spines [0–] 6 (–8) per areole, terete with bulbous bases. Flowers diurnal, at stem apex, at axillary end of areolar groove, showy, short funnelform, 2.5–3.2 × 3–5.5 cm; outer tepals whitish or magenta to purplish, to 25 × 10 mm, margins entire (sometimes irregularly, minutely denticulate); inner tepals bright-rose-pink or magenta, 15–32 × 5–11 mm, margins entire; ovary smooth, spineless; stigma lobes 4–7, white to cream, 2–4 mm. Fruits dehiscent along vertical slits or indehiscent, green to white (slightly pinkish near base), becoming tan or greenish brown, spheric, 4–10 × 4–8 mm, dry and papery, smooth, spineless; pulp absent; floral remnant deciduous. Seeds black to gray, obovoid or pyriform, 1.1–1.6 × 0.8–1.2 mm, papillate; testa cells strongly convex. x = 11.

Distribution

Arid regions, sw United States, Mexico

Discussion

Species 2 (1 in the flora).

Neolloydia is conspicuous, variable, and often confused with unrelated species, especially in Coryphantha. The papillate seeds are immediately diagnostic for distinguishing Neolloydia species from Coryphantha (seeds pitted, smooth, or ± reticulate), but they are seldom seen.

Several other genera, especially Thelocactus and the Mexican Turbinicarpus, have been variously associated with Neolloydia. Alone among authors, L. D. Benson (1969, 1982) inexplicably submerged Echinomastus into Neolloydia. A long list of differences distinguish Neolloydia from Echinomastus (E. F. Anderson 1986). Chloroplast DNA evidence (C. A. Butterworth et al. 2002) indicated no close relationship between Neolloydia and the surveyed species of Turbinicarpus and Thelocactus; Echinomastus was not represented in the study.

"elongated" is not a number.

... more about "Neolloydia"
cushionlike +
circular to linear +
deciduous +  and persistent +
hourglass--shaped +
Allan D. Zimmerman +  and Bruce D. Parfitt +
Britton & Rose +
hardened +
triangular +
proliferating +
flattened +  and cylindric +
not mucilaginous +
Arid regions +, sw United States +  and Mexico +
not separating +
Greek neos, new, and the genus name Lloydia, for Francis Ernest Lloyd, 1868–1947, Canadian botanist +
2.5 cm25 mm <br />0.025 m <br /> (3.2 cm32 mm <br />0.032 m <br />) +
tubular +, urceolate +  and salverform +
15 cm150 mm <br />0.15 m <br /> (30 cm300 mm <br />0.3 m <br />) +
0.2 cm2 mm <br />0.002 m <br /> (15 cm150 mm <br />0.15 m <br />) +
3 cm30 mm <br />0.03 m <br /> (5.5 cm55 mm <br />0.055 m <br />) +
greenish brown;tan;green;white +
indehiscent +  and dehiscent +
persistent +, long +  and deciduous +
0.4 cm4 mm <br />0.004 m <br /> (1 cm10 mm <br />0.01 m <br />) +
spheric +
0.4 cm4 mm <br />0.004 m <br /> (0.8 cm8 mm <br />0.008 m <br />) +
conspicuous +
1.5 cm15 mm <br />0.015 m <br /> (3.2 cm32 mm <br />0.032 m <br />) +
deciduous +  and persistent +
rudimentary +
flat +  and terete +
nearly +  and microscopic +
0 cm0 mm <br />0 m <br /> (0.1 cm1 mm <br />0.001 m <br />) +
tuberculate +
fluted;spheric;depressed-spheric or club-shaped +
0 cm0 mm <br />0 m <br /> (2.5 cm25 mm <br />0.025 m <br />) +
deciduous +  and persistent +
not mucilaginous +
specialized +
ridgelike +  and nipple--shaped +
Bull. Torrey Bot. Club +
anderson1986a +
3;2;2;30 +
tuberculate +
triangular +
arillate +  and strophiolate +
black +  and gray +
0.4mm;12mm +
0.11 cm1.1 mm <br />0.0011 m <br /> (0.16 cm1.6 mm <br />0.0016 m <br />) +
papillate +
pyriform;obovoid +
0.04 cm0.4 mm <br />4.0e-4 m <br /> (0.5 cm5 mm <br />0.005 m <br />) +
0.08 cm0.8 mm <br />8.0e-4 m <br /> (0.12 cm1.2 mm <br />0.0012 m <br />) +
black +, brown +, gray +  and white +
straight +
deciduous +  and persistent +
9 (?) +  and 15 (?) +
acicular +
0.6 cm6 mm <br />0.006 m <br /> (1.7 cm17 mm <br />0.017 m <br />) +
hard +  and rigid +
decurrent +
unsegmented +
6.5 cm65 mm <br />0.065 m <br /> (8 cm80 mm <br />0.08 m <br />) +
white +, gray-green +  and yellowish or bronze-tinted green +
5 cm50 mm <br />0.05 m <br /> (10 cm100 mm <br />0.1 m <br />) +
spheric +  and short cylindric +
succulent +
2.5cm;6.5cm +
white +  and cream +
0.2 cm2 mm <br />0.002 m <br /> (0.4 cm4 mm <br />0.004 m <br />) +
tuberculate +
adventitious +
tuberlike +
epipetric +  and epiphytic +
Neolloydia +
Cactaceae subfam. Cactoideae +
dull +  and glossy +
packed +  and not confluent +
8mm +  and 18mm +
conic +  and compressed +
unbranched +  and branched +
epiphytic;epiphytic;epiphytic +
not deep-seated +
barrel-shaped +  and spheric +