1.
Hylocereus undatus
(Haworth) Britton & Rose in N. L. Britton, Fl. Bermuda. 256. 1918.
Night-blooming cereus
Cereus undatus
Haworth, Philos. Mag. Ann. Chem. 7: 110. 1830
Plants
sprawling or clambering over rocks, shrubs, and trees.
Stems
usually sharply 3-angled, to 500+ × 4-7.5 cm; ribs with undulate margins and gray, hornlike bark; areoles 2 mm diam.
Spines
1-4 per areole, brownish gray, inconspicuous.
Flowers
fragrant; outer tepals white, outermost strongly reflexed, midstripes yellowish green; inner tepals white, broad, oblanceolate; filaments 50-75 mm; style cream, 175-200 mm.
Fruits
spheric to oblong.
Seeds
2 × 1 mm.
2
n
= 22.
Flowering year-round. Disturbed sites in sandy soils [tropical deciduous and semideciduous forests]; 0-50 m; introduced; Fla.; Mexico; West Indies; Central America; n South America.
Hylocereus undatus
is sporadically naturalized in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide where it is cultivated for its large, edible fruits and beautiful flowers, which are among the largest in the cactus family. In Florida,
H. undatus
has escaped from cultivation in nine counties, forming large colonies in some areas. Individuals of this species grow prolifically and may soon overrun their substrate. Whether populations of
H. undatus
in the United States are merely persisting or are also reproducing sexually remains unclear.
The vernacular name night-blooming cereus has been applied to several genera of cacti with large, nocturnal flowers.