Aztekium

From M&J Cactus Wiki
Revision as of 08:11, 24 April 2026 by Badmin (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Aztekium
File:Aztekium ritterii.jpg
Kingdom Plantae
Family Cactaceae
Subfamily Cactoideae
Tribe Cacteae
SubTribe
Genus Aztekium
Species
Notes Taxonomy follows Joël Lodé (2015) with molecular support from Butterworth et al. (2002), Bárcenas et al. (2011), and Hernández-Hernández et al. (2011).

Etymology

The name Aztekium refers to the resemblance of the rib structure to Aztec sculptures.

Description

Aztekium is a genus of small, slow-growing cacti with highly specialized rib morphology.

  • Habit: Solitary or forming small clumps; compact and slow-growing.
  • Roots: Fibrous.
  • Stems: Globose, often depressed at the apex; grey-green.
  • Ribs: Numerous, strongly wrinkled, with transverse ridges.
  • Areoles: Small, often with sparse wool.
  • Spines: Weak, short-lived (deciduous), sometimes nearly absent.
  • Flowers: Diurnal, apical; pinkish-white to magenta; small.
  • Pollination: By small insects.
  • Fruits: Small, elongated; hidden in apical wool; dry at maturity; irregularly dehiscent.
  • Seeds: Brown to black, tuberculate, with a strophiole near the hilum.
  • Dispersal: By ants (myrmecochory).

Habitat

Occurs in highly specialized and localized environments:

  • steep slopes and ravines
  • weathered shale or gypsum substrates
  • xerophytic scrub (matorral)

Some species prefer shaded microhabitats, others grow in full sun on exposed cliffs.

Altitude range: approximately 600–1200 m.

Distribution

Mexico:

  • Nuevo León

Taxonomy

The genus is well supported as monophyletic.

Key points:

  • Described by Boedeker (1929)
  • Historically compared with Strombocactus, but clearly distinct morphologically
  • Butterworth et al. (2002): placed Aztekium in a clade with Geohintonia
  • Bárcenas et al. (2011) and Hernández-Hernández et al. (2011): confirmed monophyly
  • No direct phylogenetic relationship with Strombocactus

The genus is retained as distinct following Lodé (2015).

Species

According to Joël Lodé (2015):

Notes

  • One of the most localized genera in Cactaceae.
  • Exhibits extremely slow growth and high habitat specialization.
  • Strongly associated with Geohintonia, with possible evolutionary links.
  • Some taxa have been hypothesized to involve hybrid origins, but this remains unresolved.