Weberbauerocereus
From M&J Cactus Wiki
| Weberbauerocereus | |
|---|---|
| File:Weberbauerocereus cuzcoensis.jpg | |
| Kingdom | Plantae |
| Family | Cactaceae |
| Subfamily | Cactoideae |
| Tribe | Cereeae |
| SubTribe | Trichocereinae |
| Genus | Weberbauerocereus |
| Species | |
| Notes | Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with molecular insights from Arakaki (2002, 2003, 2008) and Schlumpberger (2012). |
Etymology
Named in honour of August Weberbauer (1871–1948), German botanist and director of the botanical gardens of Lima.
Description
Weberbauerocereus is a genus of shrubby to arborescent columnar cacti adapted to Andean environments.
- Habit: Shrubby to tree-like; branching from or near the base, sometimes forming a trunk.
- Stems: Columnar; branches erect, curved or intermingled.
- Ribs: 8–25, variable.
- Areoles: Close-set, large, woolly; white, grey or yellowish.
- Spines: Numerous (20–60 radials), setose to aciculate; central spines stronger when present.
- Flowers: Nocturnal, remaining open into the morning; tubular to funnel-shaped, slightly zygomorphic.
- Floral tube: Often curved (S-shaped), with scales, hairs and bristles.
- Colour: Whitish to brownish or reddish.
- Pollination: By bats (e.g. Glossophaga soricina, Platalina genovensium), hummingbirds and bees.
- Fruits: Small, yellow-orange to reddish; slightly hairy; pulp white.
- Seeds: Small, numerous, black, shiny.
- Dispersal: Mainly by bats (limited efficiency).
Habitat
Typically found in Andean environments:
- high valleys and slopes (often north-facing)
- rocky terrain and cliffs
- areas with frequent fog and humidity
- tropical dry forests (Bolivia – W. madidiensis)
Altitude range: approximately 540–3500 m.
Distribution
South America:
- Bolivia (La Paz)
- Peru (Ancash, Arequipa, Cajamarca, Cuzco, Huancavelica, Ica, La Libertad, Lima, Moquegua)
Taxonomy
The genus has historically been difficult to delimit.
Key points:
- Morphological affinity with Cleistocactus (Backeberg; confirmed by Arakaki)
- Arakaki (2002–2008): demonstrated monophyly and clarified relationships
- Closely related to Cleistocactus and Yungasocereus
- Schlumpberger (2012): placed within a "Cleistocactus clade" including
Vatricania, Samaipaticereus, Weberbauerocereus and others
Additional notes:
- Weberbauerocereus was long thought endemic to Peru
- Discovery of W. madidiensis (2010) extended distribution into Bolivia
- Several historical misidentifications (e.g. confusion with Haageocereus fascicularis)
The genus is currently accepted as distinct.
Species
Following Joël Lodé (2015):
- Weberbauerocereus albus
- Weberbauerocereus cephalomacrostibas
- Weberbauerocereus churinensis
- Weberbauerocereus cuzcoensis
- Weberbauerocereus madidiensis
- Weberbauerocereus rauhii
- Weberbauerocereus torataensis
- Weberbauerocereus weberbaueri
- Weberbauerocereus winterianus
Notes
- Closely allied to Cleistocactus, sharing multiple morphological traits.
- Displays mixed pollination strategies (chiropterophily + ornithophily).
- Taxonomy clarified significantly through molecular studies.
- Historical confusion with Haageocereus persists in collections.
