Plantae > Tracheophyta > Magnoliopsida > Caryophyllales > Cactaceae > Cereus > Cereus repandusCereus repandus (Peruvian Apple Cactus)Synonyms: Cactus peruvianus; Cactus repandus (homotypic); Cephalocereus atroviridis; Cephalocereus peruvianus (pro parte); Cephalocereus remolinensis; Cereus atroviridis; Cereus gracilis; Cereus grenadensis; Cereus lanuginosus; Cereus margaritensis; Cereus margaritensis var. micracanthus; Cereus margaritensis var. micranthus; Cereus peruvianus; Cereus remolinensis; Cereus repandus var. laetevirens; Pilocereus atroviridis; Pilocereus fricii; Pilocereus remolinensis; Pilocereus repandus (homotypic); Pilocereus russelianus margaritensis; Piptanthocereus peruvianus; Subpilocereus atroviridis; Subpilocereus grenadensis; Subpilocereus margaritensis; Subpilocereus margaritensis var. micracanthus; Subpilocereus margaritensis var. micranthus; Subpilocereus remolinensis; Subpilocereus repandus (homotypic); Subpilocereus repandus micracanthus; Subpilocereus repandus var. weberi; Subpilocereus russelianus var. margaritensis; Subpilocereus russelianus var. micracanthus Cereus repandus (syn. Cereus peruvianus), the Peruvian apple cactus, is a large, erect, thorny columnar cactus found in South America as well as the nearby ABC Islands of the Dutch Caribbean. It is also known as giant club cactus, hedge cactus, cadushi, (in Wayuunaiki) and kayush. Cereus repandus is an unresearched, under-utilized cactus, grown mostly as an ornamental plant. As noted above, it has some local culinary importance. The Wayuu from the La Guajira Peninsula of Colombia and Venezuela also use the inner cane-like wood of the plant in wattle and daub construction. |
Attributes / relations provided by ♦ 1Resource availability, diet and reproduction in Glossophaga longirostris (Mammalia: Chiroptera) in an arid zone of the Venezuelan Andes, Maricela Sosa and Pascual J. Soriano, Journal of Tropical Ecology, 12, pp 805-818 (1996) ♦ 2Optimal foraging of a herbivorous lizard, the green iguana in a seasonal environment, Wouter D. van Marken Lichtenbelt, Oecologia (1993) 95: 246-256 ♦ 3Phyllostomus discolor, Gary G. Kwiecinski, MAMMALIAN SPECIES No. 801, pp. 111 (2006) |
Species taxanomy provided by GBIF Secretariat (2022). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2023-06-13; License: CC BY 4.0
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