5.
Echinomastus intertextus
(Engelmann) Britton & Rose, Cact. 3: 149. 1922.
Echinocactus intertextus
Engelmann, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 3: 277. 1856;
Neolloydia intertexta
(Engelmann) L. D. Benson;
Sclerocactus intertextus
(Engelmann) N. P. Taylor
Stems
5-17(-20) × 3-10 cm; ribs ca. 13; areoles (5-)9-11 mm apart along ribs; areolar glands absent.
Spines
20-29 per areole, dull tan to pale gray, pinkish, or reddish brown (rarely dull white or straw colored), usually tipped reddish brown; radial spines 13-25 per areole; abaxial (shortest) radial spine 5-13 × 0.2-0.4 mm; adaxial and lateral (longest) radial spines 9-20 mm; central spines (3-)4 per areole, abaxial central spine porrect, straight or nearly so, (0-)0.5-14(-20) mm; others 10-18(-20) × 0.2-0.5 mm.
Flowers
2.5-3(-3.8) × 2.5-3(-3.8) cm; inner tepals silvery white to pale lavender pink (rarely white with pale pink midstripes), 1.3-2.5 cm × (1-)3-5.5 mm; stigma lobes bright red or pink (rarely white).
Fruits
immediately dehiscent through wide basal pore (= circumscissile abscission scar), ± spheric, 6-15 × (6-)8-15 mm.
2
n
= 22.
Varieties 2 (2 in the flora): sw United States, n Mexico.
The mature part of the stem of
Echinomastus intertextus
is sometimes positioned above ground level on a stalklike proximal part of the stem, which often remains narrowly cylindric while the distal part broadens to the normal diameter of the adult stem. This contrasts with the other species of
Echinomastus
, which lack a stalklike stem portion between the roots and mature part of the stem. Many populations of
E. intertextus
are intermediate between the two varieties, i.e., they contain a wide range of central spine lengths. Consequently, sampling error (usually only one specimen from each population) created the illusion of extensive sympatry between long-spined and short-spined varieties.