Airampoa: Difference between revisions
From M&J Cactus Wiki
Created page with "{{Taxobox | name = Airampoa | image = Airampoa.jpg | kingdom = Plantae | family = Cactaceae | subfamily = Opuntioideae | tribe = Opuntieae | genus = '''Airampoa''' | notes = Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015). }} == Etymology == The name ''Airampoa'' is derived from the native Quechua name for the plant, ''ayrampo'' or ''airampo'', which means "garnet red". This refers to the fruits, which have long been used as a natural food coloring and dye. == Desc..." |
No edit summary |
||
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Taxobox | {{Taxobox | ||
| name = Airampoa | | name = Airampoa | ||
| image = | | image = Airampoa_ayrampo.jpg | ||
| kingdom = [[Plantae]] | | kingdom = [[Plantae]] | ||
| family = [[Cactaceae]] | | family = [[Cactaceae]] | ||
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
| tribe = [[Opuntieae]] | | tribe = [[Opuntieae]] | ||
| genus = '''Airampoa''' | | genus = '''Airampoa''' | ||
| notes = Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015). | | authority = Frič (1933) | ||
| notes = Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with reference to Guiggi (2007), Griffith & Porter (2009), and Ritz et al. (2012). | |||
}} | }} | ||
== Etymology == | == Etymology == | ||
Derived from the Quechua name ''ayrampo'', referring to the red fruits used as dye and food colouring. | |||
== Description == | == Description == | ||
'''Airampoa''' | '''Airampoa''' is a genus of small, compact opuntioid cacti forming low cushions. | ||
* | |||
* | * '''Habit''': Low-growing; strongly articulated; forming dense cushions. | ||
* | * '''Stems''': Composed of small segments; compact and clustered. | ||
* **Flowers: | * '''Leaves''': Small, cylindrical, deciduous. | ||
* | * '''Areoles''': Bearing glochids. | ||
* | * '''Spines''': Fine, acicular; variable in size and colour. | ||
* '''Flowers''': Diurnal; self-sterile. | |||
* '''Flower shape''': Bell-shaped. | |||
* '''Flower color''': Yellow, orange, red, carmine to purplish; rarely white. | |||
* '''Stigma''': Emerald green. | |||
* '''Pollination''': By bees and wasps. | |||
* '''Fruits''': Fleshy; yellow to red; laterally dehiscent; with red pulp. | |||
* '''Seeds''': Small; flattened; kidney-shaped; wrinkled; often stained by fruit pigments. | |||
* '''Seed dispersal''': By birds (notably rheas). | |||
== Habitat == | == Habitat == | ||
Occurs in high-altitude Andean environments: | |||
* puna and altiplano regions | |||
* gravelly or sandy soils | |||
* open ground or under sparse shrubs | |||
Altitude range: approximately 1800–4000 m. | |||
== Distribution == | == Distribution == | ||
South America: | |||
* Argentina | |||
* Bolivia | |||
* * | * Northern Chile | ||
* Southern Peru | |||
== Taxonomy == | |||
A problematic and variable genus. | |||
Key points: | |||
* Previously included in ''Tunilla'' (Hunt & Iliff, 2000) | |||
* Re-established as ''Airampoa'' (Guiggi, 2007) following nomenclatural revision | |||
* Distinguished by pollen morphology (perforated tectum vs reticulate in ''Opuntia'') | |||
* Molecular studies place it within Opuntieae but outside ''Opuntia'' sensu stricto | |||
* High morphological variability possibly due to hybridization | |||
The genus is accepted as distinct in Lodé (2015), though species delimitation remains uncertain. | |||
== Species == | == Species == | ||
According to | According to Joël Lodé (2015): | ||
* [[Airampoa albisaetacens]] | * [[Airampoa albisaetacens]] | ||
* [[Airampoa armata]] | * [[Airampoa armata]] | ||
* [[Airampoa ayrampo]] | * [[Airampoa ayrampo]] | ||
* [[Airampoa chilensis]] | * [[Airampoa chilensis]] | ||
* [[Airampoa corrugata]] | * [[Airampoa corrugata]] | ||
* [[Airampoa erectoclada]] | * [[Airampoa erectoclada]] | ||
* [[Airampoa microdisca]] | * [[Airampoa microdisca]] | ||
| Line 53: | Line 77: | ||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
* | * Previously confused with ''Tunilla''. | ||
* | * Likely contains fewer true species than currently listed. | ||
* Exhibits extreme morphological variability across populations. | |||
* Fruits traditionally used as natural dyes. | |||
* Represents a distinct Andean lineage within Opuntieae. | |||
[[Category:Cactaceae | [[Category:Cactaceae]] | ||
[[Category:Opuntioideae]] | |||
[[Category:Opuntieae]] | [[Category:Opuntieae]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Airampoa]] | ||
Latest revision as of 18:53, 23 April 2026
| Airampoa | |
|---|---|
| File:Airampoa ayrampo.jpg | |
| Kingdom | Plantae |
| Family | Cactaceae |
| Subfamily | Opuntioideae |
| Tribe | Opuntieae |
| SubTribe | |
| Genus | Airampoa |
| Species | |
| Notes | Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with reference to Guiggi (2007), Griffith & Porter (2009), and Ritz et al. (2012). |
Etymology
Derived from the Quechua name ayrampo, referring to the red fruits used as dye and food colouring.
Description
Airampoa is a genus of small, compact opuntioid cacti forming low cushions.
- Habit: Low-growing; strongly articulated; forming dense cushions.
- Stems: Composed of small segments; compact and clustered.
- Leaves: Small, cylindrical, deciduous.
- Areoles: Bearing glochids.
- Spines: Fine, acicular; variable in size and colour.
- Flowers: Diurnal; self-sterile.
- Flower shape: Bell-shaped.
- Flower color: Yellow, orange, red, carmine to purplish; rarely white.
- Stigma: Emerald green.
- Pollination: By bees and wasps.
- Fruits: Fleshy; yellow to red; laterally dehiscent; with red pulp.
- Seeds: Small; flattened; kidney-shaped; wrinkled; often stained by fruit pigments.
- Seed dispersal: By birds (notably rheas).
Habitat
Occurs in high-altitude Andean environments:
- puna and altiplano regions
- gravelly or sandy soils
- open ground or under sparse shrubs
Altitude range: approximately 1800–4000 m.
Distribution
South America:
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- Northern Chile
- Southern Peru
Taxonomy
A problematic and variable genus.
Key points:
- Previously included in Tunilla (Hunt & Iliff, 2000)
- Re-established as Airampoa (Guiggi, 2007) following nomenclatural revision
- Distinguished by pollen morphology (perforated tectum vs reticulate in Opuntia)
- Molecular studies place it within Opuntieae but outside Opuntia sensu stricto
- High morphological variability possibly due to hybridization
The genus is accepted as distinct in Lodé (2015), though species delimitation remains uncertain.
Species
According to Joël Lodé (2015):
- Airampoa albisaetacens
- Airampoa armata
- Airampoa ayrampo
- Airampoa chilensis
- Airampoa corrugata
- Airampoa erectoclada
- Airampoa microdisca
- Airampoa minuscula
- Airampoa orurensis
- Airampoa picardoi
- Airampoa tilcarensis
Notes
- Previously confused with Tunilla.
- Likely contains fewer true species than currently listed.
- Exhibits extreme morphological variability across populations.
- Fruits traditionally used as natural dyes.
- Represents a distinct Andean lineage within Opuntieae.
