The Cactaceae : descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family . reus chilensis. Illustration: Engler and Drude, Veg. Erde 8: pi. 19, as Cereus chilensis. Figure 198 is from a photograph of a group of plants taken in Valparaiso, Chile, byDr. Rose in 1914; figure 199 is from a photograph of a branch from the same group asgrown in the New York Botanical Garden; figure 200 is from a drawing of a flower broughtback by Dr. Rose from La Serena, Chile, in 1914. 12. Trichocereus coquimbanus (Molina). Cactus coquimbanus Molina, Sagg. Stor. Nat. Chil. 170. 1782. Cereus nigripilis Philippi


The Cactaceae : descriptions and illustrations of plants of the cactus family . reus chilensis. Illustration: Engler and Drude, Veg. Erde 8: pi. 19, as Cereus chilensis. Figure 198 is from a photograph of a group of plants taken in Valparaiso, Chile, byDr. Rose in 1914; figure 199 is from a photograph of a branch from the same group asgrown in the New York Botanical Garden; figure 200 is from a drawing of a flower broughtback by Dr. Rose from La Serena, Chile, in 1914. 12. Trichocereus coquimbanus (Molina). Cactus coquimbanus Molina, Sagg. Stor. Nat. Chil. 170. 1782. Cereus nigripilis Philippi, Fl. Atac. 23. i860. Cereus coquimbanus Schumann, Gesamtb. Kakteen 58. 1897. Plant low, 1 meter high or more, or sometimes prostrate and forming dense thickets; branches7 to 8 cm. in diameter, with 12 or 13 ribs; areoles large, circular, filled with short wool; spines about20, very for; idable, often 7 to 8 cm. long; central spines several, 2 to 6 cm. long; flowers large,white, about 10 cm. long; inner perianth-segments acute; scales of ovary and tube subtending Fig. 202.—Trichocereus coquimbanus. 140 THK CACTACEAE. Type locality: Coquimbo to Paposo, Chile. Distribution: Along the coast of the province of Coquimbo, Chile. Cereus chilensis nigripilis (Hirscht, Monatsschr. Kakteenk. 8: 159. 1898) doubtlessbelongs here. Illustrations: Monatsschr. Kakteenk. 11:27; Schumann, Gesamtb. Kakteen 3, both as Cereus nigripilis. Figure 201 is from a photograph of a plant brought by Dr. Rose from the BotanicalGarden at Santiago, Chile, in 1914; figure 202 is from a photograph taken by Dr. Rose atCoquimbo, Chile, in 1914. 13. Trichocereus terscheckii (Parmentier). Cereus terscheckii Parmentier in Pfeiffer, Allg. Gartenz. 5: 370. fercheckii Parmentier, Hort. Beige 5: 66. 1838 (fide Index Kewensis).Cereus julvispinus Salm-Dyck, Cact. Hort. Dyck. 1849. 46. terscheckii Rumpler in Forster, Handb. Cact. ed. 2. 688. 1885. At first columnar, in ag


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbrittonn, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1919