CACTACEAE
FAMILY
- All but
one cactus species is endemic to (occurs naturally
only in) the New World
- All
cactuses are succulent (have water-storing tissue),
but not all succulents are cactuses (e.g., Sotol).
This sometimes makes it difficult to distinguish cactuses from other plants
that convergently evolved (developed similar
characteristics due to experiencing similar environmental constraints) with
cactuses (e.g., Ocotillo).
- To be a
cactus, the plant must have the following set of characteristics:
- areoles: structures from which spines, branches, and flowers
come (see picture).
- flowers
with many sepals and petals that intergrade with each other.
- flowers
with many stamens.
- flowers
with multi-lobed stigma.
- Most
cactuses use CAM
(Crassulacean Acid Metabolism) photosynthesis, taking in carbon dioxide at
night instead of the day to save water (evaporation rates are lower at night
generally), storing the carbon dioxide as an acid, and then releasing the
carbon dioxide during the day for photosynthesis.
- Columnar
cactuses, with leguminous
trees, characterize the Sonoran Desert
- Besides
columnar cactuses, other major groups include barrels, hedgehogs, pincushions,
chollas, and prickly pears (see Major
Types of Cactuses).
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