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Gymnocalycium esperanzae

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Gymnocalycium esperanzae
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Cactaceae
Subfamily: Cactoideae
Genus: Gymnocalycium
Species:
G. esperanzae
Binomial name
Gymnocalycium esperanzae
Řepka & Kulhánek 2011

Gymnocalycium esperanzae is a species of Gymnocalycium from Argentina.[1]

Description

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Gymnocalycium esperanzae is a cactus with stems 5–16 cm in diameter and 5–12 cm tall, shaped from flattened to round. Its greenish-brown to greenish-grey surface has a grey bloom, with 7–16 ribs that start shallow and straight in youth but develop notches with age. The cactus features round to elongated areoles spaced 7–18 mm apart, covered with yellowish to blackish wool that thins over time. It has no central spines but 3–7 radial spines, 8–25 mm long, in colors like brown, black, bluish-grey, purple, or horn-like; the arrangement forms a T-shape with three spines or a shorter upper pair with five or seven. Flowers are 45–70 mm long, 35–40 mm wide, pale pink to whitish-rose, often with purplish bases, and have a yellowish-white style and pale yellow stigma. Fruits are 20–35 mm long, spindle-shaped, and vary from greyish-green to bluish-green or pale brown, with blackish-brown seeds.[2]

Distribution

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Plants are found growing west of Nueva Esperanza in San Martin Department in the province of La Rioja Province, Argentina, Argentina at elevations above 500 meters. Plants grow on loam and gravel in low hills with dense shrub-land with scattered trees.[2]

Taxonomy

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This species was described in 2011 by Radomír Řepka and Tomáš Kulhánek in Schütziana. Plants are named after Nueva Esperanza, a village close to where the plant was discovered.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "Gymnocalycium esperanzae Řepka & Kulhánek". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2024-12-08.
  2. ^ a b "Gymnocalycium esperanzae". LLIFLE. 2013-08-04. Retrieved 2024-12-08. This article incorporates text from this source, which is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license.
  3. ^ "Schütziana 2(2011)3 p. 2 ISSN 2191-3099" (PDF). Retrieved 2024-12-14.
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