Aztekium

The genus Aztekium contains two species of small globular cactus. Discovered in 1929 by F. Ritter, in Rayones, Nuevo León, Mexico, this genus was thought to be monotypic (with Aztekium ritteri) until a second species (Aztekium hintonii) was discovered by George S. Hinton, in Galeana, Nuevo León in 1991. A further possible species, Aztekium valdezii, was described in 2011, but is considered to be a synonym of A. ritteri.[3]

Aztekium
Aztekium ritteri0056.jpg
Aztekium ritteri
Scientific classificatione
Kingdom:Plantae
Clade:Tracheophytes
Clade:Angiosperms
Clade:Eudicots
Order:Caryophyllales
Family:Cactaceae
Subfamily:Cactoideae
Tribe:Cacteae
Genus:Aztekium
Boed.[1]
Species
  • A. hintonii Glass & Fitz Maurice
  • A. ritteri (Boed.) Boed.[2]

DescriptionEdit

Aztekium ritteri is a small plant (around 20 mm wide), with 9 to 11 ribs, which typically have transverse wrinkles. Its color varies from pale green to grayish-green. The center of the cactus contains a lot of white wool. Flowers are small (less than 10 mm wide), with white petals and pinkish sepals. The plants bear small pinkish berry-like fruits. A. hintonii is larger, to 10 cm in diameter, 10 to 18 grooved ribs, flowers magenta to 3 cm. It grows only on gypsum.

SpeciesEdit

ImageScientific nameDistribution
Aztekium hintonii2.jpgAztekium hintoniiNuevo León.
Aztekium ritteri0056.jpgAztekium ritteriMexico.

EtymologyEdit

Its name is dedicated to the Aztec people, due to the resemblance between the plant's shape and certain Aztec sculptures.[citation needed]

DistributionEdit

This genus is found only in the state of Nuevo León in Mexico. It was estimated[by whom?] that there were in the order of tens of millions of plants of A. hintonii, and at present most of its range is pristine.[citation needed] Though A. ritteri has been collected for decades and there has been destruction of its habitat, the number of plants in habitat is several million.[citation needed]

CultivationEdit

These species grow extremely slowly, taking around two years to attain a diameter of 3 mm. They are usually propagated by seeds.[citation needed]

PhytochemistryEdit

The plants contain the following compounds[citation needed]:

  • N-methyltyramine
  • hordenine
  • anhalidine
  • mescaline
  • N,N-3,4-dimethoxy-phenethylamine
  • pellotine
  • 3-methoxytyramine

 


This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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