itd 
44 THE CACTACEAE. 
ECHINOCEREUS THWAITESII (Schumann, Gesamtb. Kakteen 290. 1898) is only a name. 
ECHINOCEREUS TROCKYI is advertised for sale by A. V. Fric at 20 to 40 marks per plant (Monatsschr. 
Kakteenk. 28: No. 8. 1918). 
The following have been listed in the American Cyclopedia of Horticulture as being 
unidentifiable: Echinocereus polycephalus, E. paucupina, E. uspenskii, E. uehri, and E. 
sangutneus. 
Echinocereus dahliaeflorus, with an illustration, appeared in a reputable Garden 
Magazine (Mollers Deutsche Gart. Zeit. 15: 148. 1900), issued on April rst. The April 
Fool joke is so cleverly concealed that the editor deceived himself, for he carefully indexed 
the name at the end of the year. The name is to be ignored. 
Echinocereus princeps Forster, E. persolutus Forster (Hamb. Gartenz. 17: 163. 1861), 
and E. raphicephalus Forster (Hamb. Gartenz. 17: 164. 1861) were described without 
flowers and we can not decide their generic alliance. The second species came from Peru 
and can be excluded from this genus. 
Echinocereus penicilliformis Linke (Wochenschr. Gartn. Pflanz. 1: 85. 1858) we do not 
know, but since it comes from Bolivia it can be excluded from the genus Echinocereus. 
af , 4. f _ S22 
Seoul. Lhd genad / 79) 2 AUSTROCACTUS gen. nov. 
Plants low, ribbed, the areoles borne on the tuberculate ribs; spines in two series, the centrals 
_4/4:”hooked; flowers diurnal(?), borne at the upper part of areoles near the top of the plant, large, 
wo 
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ft 
n 
pinkish yellow, with a short, but rather definite tube and campanulate limb; perianth-segments 
aristate-acuminate; style as long as the stamens; stigma-lobes red to purplish; ovary and flower-tube 
very spiny or bristly; fruit spiny; seeds dull, flattened, reticulated. 
Type species: Cereus bertinit Cels. 
Only one species is known, inhabiting Pata- 
gonia. | 
The generic name is from auster, south, and 
cactus, referring to the habitat of the plant. 
This genus seems to be the South American 
representative of the North American genus 
Echinocereus. It is like it in habit, ribs, flowers, and 
fruit, but its stigma-lobes are red, not green, and the 
central spines are always hooked. It has nothing 
to do with Eulychnia to which Berger referred it. 
1. Austrocactus bertinii* (Cels). 
Cereus bertint Cels, Hort. Franc. II. 5: 251. 1863. 
Simple or perhaps sometimes cespitose, olive-green, 
15 to 40cm. high; ribs 10 to 12, prominent; areoles cir- 
cular, yellow-felted; radial spines about 15, acicular, 
straight, spreading, about 1 cm. long; central spines 4, 
very slender, strongly hooked, brownish to blackish, 
the lower and longest up to 3 cm. long; flowers when _ 
fully expanded reaching 10 cm. in breadth, about 6 cm. FIG. 56.—Austrocactus bertini 
long; outer perianth-segments about 30, pinkish to brown, spiny tipped; inner perianth-segments 
about 20, pinkish yellow, oblong, long-acuminate, 4 cm. long, 1 cm. broad; stamens in two 
definite series; style thickish, red, longer than the stamens; stigma-lobes 16, linear; ovary and 
flower-tube with numerous areoles, these with clusters of 5 or 6 bristles or acicular spines. 
Type locality: On the coast of Argentina, latitude 45° 30’ South. 
Distribution: Southern Argentinat (Patagonia). 
*The original spelling of the specific name was bertini. 
{Schumann states that it comes from Paraguay while the Index Kewensis says Chile. 
so ar 
