




Your support is critical to our success.
Nova Acta Phys.-Med. Acad. Caes. Leop.-Carol. Nat. Cur. 16(1): 335, t. 22. 1832
Family: CACTACEAE

Origin and Habitat: Mammillaria karwinskianaSN|20736]]SN|20736]] has a very wide range in Guatemala and Mexico( Chiapas, Colima, Guerrero, Oaxaca, Morelos, Michoacán, and Puebla).
Altitude: 150 - 2100 metres above sea level.
Habitat: This species is common and abundant in tropical deciduous forest and xerophyllous scrub along with Ferocactus robustusSN|21488]]SN|21488]], Heliabravoa chendeSN|7732]]SN|7732]], Agave karwinskii, Agave lechuguillaSN|23013]]SN|23013]], Agave salmiana and Yucca periculosaSN|29988]]SN|29988]]. It is threatened by deforestation for small-holder agriculture and goat-ranching.
Synonyms:
- Mammillaria karwinskiana Mart.
- Cactus karwinskianus (Mart.) Kuntze
- Neomammillaria karwinskiana (Mart.) Britton & Rose
Mammillaria karwinskiana Mart.
Nova Acta Phys.-Med. Acad. Caes. Leop.-Carol. Nat. Cur. 16(1): 335, t. 22. 1832
Synonymy: 31
- Mammillaria karwinskiana Mart.
- Cactus karwinskianus (Mart.) Kuntze
- Neomammillaria karwinskiana (Mart.) Britton & Rose
- Mammillaria confusa (Britton & Rose) Orcutt
- Mammillaria pyrrhocephala var. confusa (Britton & Rose) Borg
- Neomammillaria confusa Britton & Rose
- Mammillaria confusa var. centrispina R.T.Craig
- Neomammillaria confusa var. centrispina (R.T.Craig) Y.Itô
- Mammillaria confusa var. robustispina R.T.Craig
- Mammillaria conzattii (Britton & Rose) Orcutt
- Mammillaria confusa var. conzattii (Britton & Rose) R.T.Craig
- Neomammillaria conzattii Britton & Rose
- Mammillaria ebenacantha Shurly
- Mammillaria fischeri Pfeiff.
- Cactus fischeri (Pfeiff.) Kuntze
- Mammillaria jozef-bergeri Wojnowski & Prajer
- Mammillaria karwinskiana var. virens (Scheidw.) Salm-Dyck
- Cactus virens (Scheidw.) Kuntze
- Mammillaria virens Scheidw.
- Mammillaria multiseta Ehrenb.
- Mammillaria nagliana Repp.
- Mammillaria neomystax Backeb.
- Neomammillaria neomystax (Backeb.) Y.Itô
- Mammillaria neomystax var. rhodacantha Y.Itô
- Neomammillaria neomystax var. rhodacantha (Y.Itô) Y.Itô
- Mammillaria praelii Muehlenpf.
- Cactus praelii (Muehlenpf.) Kuntze
- Mammillaria viridis var. praelii (Muehlenpf.) Salm-Dyck
- Neomammillaria praelii (Muehlenpf.) Britton & Rose
- Mammillaria strobilina Tiegel
- Mammillaria tropica Repp.
Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. beiselii (Diers) D.R.Hunt
Mammillaria Postscripts 6: 11 (1997)
Synonymy: 2
- Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. beiselii (Diers) D.R.Hunt
- Mammillaria beiselii Diers
Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. collinsii (Britton & Rose) D.R.Hunt
Mammillaria Postscripts 6: 11 (1997)
Synonymy: 6
- Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. collinsii (Britton & Rose) D.R.Hunt
- Mammillaria collinsii (Britton & Rose) Orcutt
- Mammillaria voburnensis subs. collinsii (Britton & Rose) U.Guzmán
- Mammillaria voburnensis var. collinsii (Britton & Rose) Repp.
- Neomammillaria collinsii Britton & Rose
- Mammillaria voburnensis var. quetzalcoatl Repp.
Mammillaria karwinskiana var. flavescens Zucc. ex Pfeiff.
Enum. Diagn. Cact. 19. 1837 ?
Accepted name in llifle Database:
Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. nejapensis (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) D.R.Hunt
Mammillaria Postscripts 6: 11 (1997)
Synonymy: 13
- Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. nejapensis (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) D.R.Hunt
- Mammillaria nejapensis R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson
- Mammillaria nejapensis f. aureispina (Y.Itô)
- Mammillaria nejapensis f. brevispina (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) Krainz
- Mammillaria nejapensis var. brevispina R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson
- Neomammillaria nejapensis var. brevispina (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) Y.Itô
- Mammillaria nejapensis f. elegans (Y.Itô)
- Mammillaria nejapensis f. longispina (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) Krainz
- Mammillaria nejapensis var. longispina R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson
- Neomammillaria nejapensis var. longispina (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) Y.Itô
- Mammillaria nejapensis var. typica R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson
RUSSIAN (Русский): Маммиллярия Карвинского
SWEDISH (Svenska): Höstvårtkaktus
Description: Mammillaria karwinskianaSN|20736]]SN|20736]] is a solitary, or slowly branching dichotomously (or basally) cactus, with cream coloured 'snowy' tomentum on the top of the plant. Four subspecies are recognized, the nominate, ssp. beiselii (Diers) D.R Hunt, ssp. collinsii (Orcutt) D.R.Hunt and ssp. nejapensis (R.T.Craig & E.Y Dawson) D.R.Hunt.
Stem: Globose to short cylindrical, blue-green to dark green, up to 12 cm in diameter, 8-20 cm tall. With latex. The Axil is very woolly, with tufts of white hair and long white bristles.
Tubercles: Firm, pyramidal, arranged spirally with 13-21 parastichys.
Radial spines: Usually 6, awl-like, straight to slightly curved, cream to reddish tipped with brown, becoming chalky white with age, 4 - 30 mm long, upper and lower ones longest.
Central spines: Absent.
Flowers: Funnel-form, cream-white to yellow with purplish mid-veins, up to 25 mm long and 15 mm in diameter. Blooms adorn the crown of the plant, usually in a ring, in the growth of the previous year.
Flowering time: Early spring.
Fruits: Red, elongated, and quite attractive.
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Mammillaria karwinskiana group
Mammillaria karwinskiana Mart.: (subsp. karwinskiana ) has medium yellow flowers with purpleish mid-veins, no central spine, and 6 radial spines.
- Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. beiselii (Diers) D.R.Hunt: has white flowers with red tinted mid-veins, one central spine, and 5-8 radial spines.
- Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. collinsii (Britton & Rose) D.R.Hunt: has white flowers with deeper pinkish mid-veins, one central spine, and 7 radial spines.
Mammillaria karwinskiana subs. nejapensis (R.T.Craig & E.Y.Dawson) D.R.Hunt: also has white flowers with red tinted midv-eins, but the spines are larger and white and have much more wool. No central spines, and 3-5 radial spines per areole.
Notes: This is one of the Mammillaria commonly called "Owl Eye Cactus", known for dichotomous branching (forking or dividing into two parts). Although dichotomous branching is not a common occurrence in cacti in general, it happens for some reason in this particular species. What is interesting about this cactus is that it began as a single head, one head became two, and so on. Other Owl Eye Cactus among others comprise Mammillaria crucigeraSN|15836]]SN|1835]], Mammillaria formosaSN|15832]]SN|15832]], Mammillaria microtheleSN|1835]]SN|15836]] and Mammillaria perbella.
Bibliography: Major references and further lectures
1) David Hunt, Nigel Taylor “The New Cactus Lexicon” DH Books, 2006
2) John Pilbeam (1999) “Mammillaria The Cactus File Handbook” Nuffield Press.
3) Nathaniel Lord Britton, Joseph Nelson Rose “Cactaceae: Descriptions and Illustrations of Plants of the Cactus Family” vol. 4 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington 1923
4) Stuart Max Walters “The European Garden Flora: Dicotyledons (Part I)” Cambridge University Press, 1989
5) Edward F. Anderson “The Cactus Family” Timber Press, 2001
6) Hernández, H.M. & Gómez-Hinostrosa, C. 2013. Mammillaria karwinskiana. In: IUCN 2013. "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species." Version 2013.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 03 January 2014.

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Carolina González

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Alexander Arzberger

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Cactus Art

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Cactus Art

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Cactus Art

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Alexander Arzberger

Mammillaria karwinskiana Photo by: Cactus Art
The gallery now contains thousands of pictures, however it is possible to do even more. We are, of course, seeking photos of species not yet shown in the gallery but not only that, we are also looking for better pictures than those already present. Read More...
Cultivation and Propagation: They are easy to cultivate, and make interesting specimens for any collection. Over time they will produce large clumps. It grows by dichotomously dividing, and also by producing offsets and doesn't require any special treatment, but needs as much light as possible without burning the plant, to keep the stems compact. It needs a well-drained soil mix. Water well and then allow to dry thoroughly before watering again, during the growing season. It doesn't like much, if any, winter water, and can survive short exposures to freezing temperatures (-4° C.) if properly hardened off and kept dry.
Propagation: Mammillaria karwinskianaSN|20736]]SN|20736]] is best propagated from seed. Seed readily germinates at 20°-22°C, or by offsets if available.
Your Actions | |
---|---|
![]() |
Back to Mammillaria index |
![]() |
Back to Cactaceae index |
![]() |
Back to Cacti Encyclopedia index |
Privacy stantement - Terms and conditions - How to cite - About us - Feedback - Donate
