Stetsonia

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Revision as of 08:30, 20 April 2026 by Badmin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Taxobox | name = Stetsonia | image = Stetsonia_coryne.jpg | kingdom = Plantae | family = Cactaceae | subfamily = Cactoideae | tribe = Cereeae | genus = '''Stetsonia''' | authority = Britton & Rose (1920) | notes = Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with molecular insights from Nyffeler (2002), Crozier (2005), Machado (2007), and Hernández-Hernández et al. (2011). }} == Etymology == Named in honour of Francis Lynde Stetson (1846–1920), an American...")
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Stetsonia
File:Stetsonia coryne.jpg
Kingdom Plantae
Family Cactaceae
Subfamily Cactoideae
Tribe Cereeae
SubTribe
Genus Stetsonia
Species
Notes Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with molecular insights from Nyffeler (2002), Crozier (2005), Machado (2007), and Hernández-Hernández et al. (2011).

Etymology

Named in honour of Francis Lynde Stetson (1846–1920), an American lawyer and botanically inclined patron associated with the New York Botanical Garden.

Description

Stetsonia is a monotypic genus of massive, tree-like cacti.

  • Habit: Arborescent, strongly branched (often 100+ branches), forming a well-defined trunk up to ~40 cm in diameter; reaching up to 8 m tall.
  • Stems: Bluish-green, club-shaped, not segmented.
  • Ribs: 8–9, thick, slightly crenate.
  • Areoles: Woolly.
  • Spines: 7–9 radial spines up to ~3 cm; 1 central spine up to 7 cm or more, straight and sharp.
  • Flowers: Nocturnal, funnel-shaped, white and fragrant; remain open into daytime; self-sterile.
  • Pollination: Mainly by hawkmoths (Sphingidae).
  • Fruits: Globose to ovoid, green tinged with red, edible, scaly; perianth remnants deciduous.
  • Seeds: Small, brown to black, shiny, rough and warty; ovate to spoon-shaped.
  • Dispersal: Likely by mammals such as tapirs (Tapirus terrestris) and other fauna.

Habitat

Occurs in dry lowland to montane environments:

  • arid plains and dry forests
  • Chaco vegetation and shrubby pampas
  • hills and mountain slopes

Altitude range: typically 100–900 m, rarely up to ~2200 m.

Often associated with Cereus forbesii and Opuntia quimilo.

Distribution

South America:

  • Argentina
  • Bolivia
  • Brazil (southern regions)
  • Paraguay

Taxonomy

The genus is currently accepted but has undergone shifting placement.

Key points:

  • Initially placed in tribe Cereeae
  • Barthlott & Hunt (1993): transferred to Browningieae
  • Nyffeler (2002): positioned within the broader "BCT" clade
  • Crozier (2005): supported placement in Cereeae
  • Hernández-Hernández et al. (2011): confirmed inclusion in Cereeae

Current consensus places Stetsonia within Cereeae, likely in a basal position among South American lineages.

Species

Monotypic genus:

Notes

  • One of the largest tree-like cacti in South America.
  • Represents an early-diverging lineage within Cereeae.
  • Historically associated with Browningieae, a tribe now largely reinterpreted.
  • Fruits are edible and play a role in local ecosystems.