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Blossfeldia
Genus of cacti From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Blossfeldia is a genus of cacti (family Cactaceae) containing only one species, Blossfeldia liliputana,[1] native to South America in northwestern Argentina[2] (Jujuy,[3] Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca and Mendoza Provinces)[4] and southern Bolivia[2] (Santa Cruz and Potosí Departments).[4] It grows at 1,200–3,500 m altitude in the Andes, typically growing in rock crevices,[2] and often close to waterfalls.[citation needed]
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Description
It is the smallest cactus species in the world, with a mature size around 10–12 mm diameter, solitary or with many dark-green stems forming colonies in the fissures of the rocks; it does not have ribs or tubercles, nor spines. The flowers are white or rarely pink, 6–15 mm long, and 5–7 mm diameter.[2]
The genus Blossfeldia has been divided into many separate species, but most morphological evidence indicates the genus to be monotypic, and contains only B. liliputiana.[5] The flowers emerge from the apex of the stem, 0.5 to 1 cm long and 0.5 cm in diameter, white. They self-pollinate. The fruit is globose, red, and woolly, with very small, brown seeds.
The species is named after the fictional country of Lilliput, where all of the inhabitants are minute.
- Plant growing in between rocks in Purmamarca
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Taxonomy
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The genus and species were first described in 1937 by Erich Werdermann after being discovered in northern Argentina by Harry Blossfeld and Oreste Marsoner, while exploring northern Argentina in 1936.[3] The genus name honors Blossfeld.[2] B. liliputiana has several features making it unique among cacti, including a very small number of stomata, the absence of a thickened cuticle, and hairy seeds with an aril. It is placed in the subfamily Cactoideae, and traditionally in the tribe Notocacteae.[2] However, molecular phylogenetic studies have repeatedly shown that it is sister to the remaining members of the subfamily, and well removed from other genera placed in the Notocacteae:[6][7]
subfamily Cactoideae |
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Nyffeler and Eggli, in their 2010 classification of Cactaceae, accepted tribe Blossfeldieae as outlined by Crozier,[8] within Cactoideae.[9] Earlier, Blossfeldia was considered as a distinct genus within the tribe Notocacteae;[2] it had even been placed in an entirely separate subfamily, Blossfeldioideae.[8]
A nomenclature synonym is Parodia liliputana (Werderm.) N.P.Taylor (1987).
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