Pachyphytum is a small genus of succulents in the stonecrop family, Crassulaceae, native to Mexico, where species can be found growing at elevations from 600 to 1,500 metres (2,000 to 4,900 ft) above sea level. The generic name comes from the ancient Greek pachys ('thick') and phyton ('plant'), a reference of the succulent nature of the leaves.

Pachyphytum
Pachyphytum oviferum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Crassulaceae
Subfamily: Sempervivoideae
Tribe: Sedeae
Genus: Pachyphytum
Link.
Species

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Description

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The member species of the genus Pachyphytum are perennial succulent plants, which grow as hairless rosettes on ever-lengthening, somewhat delicate stems. The upright plants grow up to 70 cm when young, and develop into a prostrate growth habit over time (to over 1 meter in length, in some cases). The simple, occasionally basally-branching, shoots can reach a diameter of up to 3.5 cm. The rosettes have a diameter of 6 to 20 cm and are made up of roughly 10 leaves; larger specimens may contain 40, rarely up to 80, clearly separated leaves that are often intensely blue-, teal- or lavender-frosted. Towards the tip, the newer leaves are much tighter and more crowded-together. The youngest leaves are, more or less, erect, later spreading and flattening slightly; the older foliage often curls-back. Leaves are obovate to spatulate or elliptical-oblong to lanceolate and usually end blunted to slightly pointed.

The upright inflorescence emerges laterally from the leaf axils of the uppermost foliage. The lower 10 to 20 cm of the flower stalks are leafless, the upper 6 to 9 cm are covered with basally spurred, leaf-like bracts. The inflorescence is simple and initially overhanging. Later it is erect and bears up to 50 individual flowers. The bracts (brachts) are mostly overlapping and elliptical to obovate or lanceolate in shape. They are, basally, often arrow- to stalk-shaped, encompassing or more or less bidentate spurred.

The flower stalk, which becomes thicker towards the top, has a diameter of 2 to 15 mm. The flowers are five, rarely sixfold and obdiplostemon. The tubular, barrel or bell-shaped, sometimes pentagonal corolla measures 5.5 to 17 mm × 3.5 to 10 mm at the base and 4.5 to 17 mm in diameter at the top. It is white to pink, more rarely orange to red or reddish in color. The elongated to oblanceolate petals are 7–17 mm × 2.5–6 mm in size. The flower tube is usually spread out above the middle and bent back at the time of flowering. On the inside there is usually a red spot above the middle. The stamens are in two circles. The greenish or red styles are indistinctly set off and 1 to 2 mm in size. Pollination is probably by hummingbirds.

The fruits are splaying and open partially to fully at the suture. The obovate seed is smooth, reddish brown and 0.5–0.8 mm × 0.25–0.4 mm in size.

Species

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The genus Pachyphytum was established by Heinrich Friedrich Link, Johann Friedrich Klotzsch and Christoph Friedrich Otto in 1841, and first described in the German publication Allgemeine Gartenzeitung ("General Gardening Newspaper”). The primary, natural distribution of Pachyphytum is restricted to eastern and central Mexico, where the plants grow on rocky, well-drained slopes at altitudes of 600 to 2500 m. Some species, such as P. oviferum and P. hookeri, have been introduced to or established in small locales of other countries within Latin America, such as Brazil, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia, among others.[1]

According to Joachim Thiede, the genus Pachyphytum includes the following species, which are divided into two sections:

Section Image Scientific name Distribution
Section Diotostemon Pachyphytum brevifolium Rose Aguascalientes[2]
  Pachyphytum coeruleum J. Meyrán Mexico
  Pachyphytum compactum Rose Guanajuato, Querétaro[3]
  Pachyphytum hookeri (Salm-Dyck) A. Berger Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí[4]
Pachyphytum machucae I. García, Glass & see Cházaro Basáñoez, Miguel de Jesús Mexico
Section Pachyphytum Pachyphytum brachetii Reyes, González & Gutiérrez Mexico
  Pachyphytum bracteosum Klotzsch Hidalgo[5]
Pachyphytum caesium Kimnach & Moran Mexico
Pachyphytum contrerasii E. Pérez-Calix, I. García & Cházaro Mexico
Pachyphytum cuicatecanum (J. Reyes, Joel Pérez & Brachet) Kimnach Mexico
  Pachyphytum fittkaui Moran Mexico
Pachyphytum garciae Pérez-Calix & Glass Mexico
  Pachyphytum glutinicaule Moran Mexico
  Pachyphytum kimnachii Moran Mexico
  Pachyphytum longifolium Rose Mexico
  Pachyphytum oviferum Purpus México (state), San Luis Potosí[6]
  Pachyphytum rzedowskii I. García, E. Pérez-Calix & Meyrán Mexico
Pachyphytum saltense Brachet, Reyes & Mondragón Mexico (Zacatecas)
Pachyphytum rogeliocardenasii Pérez-Calix & Torres[7] N.W. Querétaro
  Pachyphytum viride E.Walther
  Pachyphytum werdermannii Poelln.[8][9] Mexico

References

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  1. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Observations • iNaturalist".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ PÉREZ-CALIX, EMMANUEL PÉREZ-CALIX; TORRES-COLÍN, RAFAEL (2018). "Pachyphytum rogeliocardenasii (Crassulaceae), a new species from northwestern Querétaro, Mexico". Phytotaxa. 348 (1): 056–062. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.348.1.7.
  8. ^ "Search for Pachyphytum". The Plant List. Retrieved 2017-10-25.
  9. ^ "Pachyphytum". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. GBIF Secretariat Universitetsparken 15. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
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