= Frailea uhligiana Backeb. in Backeb.
Descr. Cact. Nov. iii. 6 (1963) Backeb.
Accepted Scientific Name: Frailea cataphracta subs. duchii (G.Moser) P.J.Braun & Esteves
Succulenta (Netherlands) 74: 130 1995
Astrophytum uhligianum (Frailea uhligiana) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Origin and Habitat: San Jose, Chiquito, between Santa Cruz and Corumba, Bolivia
Altitude: 300-500m.
Habitat: Fraileas are specialized plant that live restricted in a narrow ecological niche among large rock domes protruding from surrounding ground in the zone where the soil meets the rock and is less than 2-3 cm deep. The soil is fine sandy-loamy or fine grained and permeable, but too shallow for a lot of plants that otherwise would shade out the tiny frailea. Frailea uhligianaSN|3600]]SN|3600]] forms dense colonies in all sizes and grows together with Gymnocalycium chiquitanumSN|13319]]SN|26064]] and Gymnocalycium damsiiSN|26064]]SN|13319]] v. torulosum.
Synonyms:
See all synonyms of Frailea cataphracta
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Accepted name in llifle Database:Frailea cataphracta (Dams) Britton & RoseCactaceae (Britton & Rose) 3: 210. 1922 [12 Oct 1922]Synonymy: 3
Accepted name in llifle Database:Frailea cataphracta subs. duchii (G.Moser) P.J.Braun & EstevesSucculenta (Netherlands) 74: 130 1995Synonymy: 11
Accepted name in llifle Database:Frailea cataphracta subs. tuyensis (Buining & G.Moser) P.J.Braun & EstevesSucculenta (Netherlands) 74: 130 1995.Synonymy: 5
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Description: Frailea uhligianaSN|3597]]SN|3600]] is a dwarf cactus with unique and remarkably beautiful shape. It is one of the geographical forms of the morphologically variable Frailea cataphractaSN|3600]]SN|3597]] subsp. duchii and it is distinguished for the green to bronze bodies with up to 25 ribs and less adpressed spines up to 4 mm long. The genus is cleistogamous, the colour of the flower is yellow.
Habit: It is a s small depressed perennial stem succulent with age begins to clump around the base and grow oddly. It grows deep seated flat to the ground surface. Only in cultivation plants may have a spherical till columnar shape.
Roots: The rootstock is fleshy, turnip-like, with fine diffuse roots.
Stem: Spherical-depressed, outdoors red brown to to dirty bronze red, with glass protection green, up to 3,5 cm in diameter, 2,5 cm tall more or less imbilicate at apex
Ribs: Up to 25, with noticeable tubercles only in the new growth, later flatted above and with a purple-brown lunate, blots situated below the areoles.
Areoles: Rounded almost bare or with whitish or brownish wool.
Radial spines: 8-10 straight or slightly curved inward, very small, only about 2-4 mm long, adpressed to spreading, whitish, yellowish grey, amber coloured or reddish brown to almost black
Central spines: Absent (occasionally 1 or 2).
Flowers: Apical, diurnal, radial, sulphur yellow from the top of the plant, about 3 cm in diameter. Buds with light brown wool. But don't be disappointed when the easily produced buds fail to open. Fraileas are cleistogamous meaning that their flowers produce seed without even opening. Without the need for pollination, hence the buds rarely reach full bloom and remain closed. They will open only in great heat in the hottest, brightest, afternoon sun, if at all.
Fruits: Dry indehiscent with scales and bristles that detach easily, pericarp membranous, fragile that break easily releasing the seed.
Seeds: Comparatively large, blackish and shining, up to 2 mm wide, circular, hat shaped with a prominent edge.
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Frailea cataphracta group
- Frailea cataphracta (Dams) Britton & Rose: (subsp. cataphracta), has dull green bodies with few (8-15) ribs, spine to 2 mm addpressed, centrals absent. Distribution: Bolivia and Paraguay.
- Frailea cataphracta subs. duchii (G.Moser) P.J.Braun & Esteves: has dirty bronze bodies with less than 18 ribs, spines to 4 mm, centrals absent or 1-2. Distribution: southeast of Asuncion, Paraguay.
- Frailea cataphracta subs. melitae (Buining & Bredero) P.J.Braun & Esteves: (F. cataphracta subs. duchii) has less than 21 flattened, but noticeably tuberculate ribs. Distribution: Mato Grosso, Brazil
- Frailea cataphracta subs. tuyensis (Buining & G.Moser) P.J.Braun & Esteves: has less than 20 ribs. Distribution: Paraguay.
- Frailea cataphractoides Backeb.: (F. cataphracta subs. duchii) has greyish-olive-green bodies (purplish to black in full sun) with very closely set brown areoles and spines up to 4 mm long. Distributiin: Bolivia.
- Frailea matoana Buining & Bredero: (F. cataphracta subs. duchii) has reddish to dark brown body with 15 ribs, areoles with brown or blackish spines to 4 mm long. Distribution: municípios de Antonio João, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil
- Frailea uhligiana Backeb. in Backeb.: (F. cataphracta subs. duchii) has green to bronze bodies with up to 25 ribs and less adpressed spines up to 4 mm long. Distribution: San Jose between Santa Cruz and Corumba, Bolivia.
Bibliography: Major references and further lectures
1) Walther Haage “Kakteen von A bis Z” Neumann Verlag 1981
2) Edward Anderson “The Cactus family” Timber Press, Incorporated, 2001
3) James Cullen, Sabina G. Knees, H. Suzanne Cubey "The European Garden Flora Flowering Plants: A Manual for the Identification of Plants Cultivated in Europe, Both Out-of-Doors and Under Glass" Cambridge University Press, 11/Aug/2011
4) David R Hunt; Nigel P Taylor; Graham Charles; International Cactaceae Systematics Group. "The New Cactus Lexicon" dh books, 2006
Astrophytum uhligianum (Frailea uhligiana) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Astrophytum uhligianum (Frailea uhligiana) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Cultivation and Propagation: Frailea cataphractaSN|3597]]SN|3597]] subs. uhligiana is a summer grower species relatively easy to grow. It is sometime seen as a grafted plant but grows very well on its own roots too. Characteristically, during the dry season plants retract completely under the ground both in the wild and in cultivation too.
Growth rate: Fraileas are relatively short-lived plants, only lasting few years (rarely more than 10-15 years in cultivation) and, possible annuals in habitat! In fact they reseed readily around the base of the mother plant from self-set seed if kept reasonably moist during warm weather. It is a good idea to keep restarting them from seed; what looks like a healthy big plant may suddenly die of old age without warning.
Soil: Use mineral well permeable substratum with little organic matter (peat, humus), plants may become too elongated if compost is too rich.
Repotting: Re-pot every 2 years. Use pot with good drainage.
Fertilization: It grows much faster with a low nitrogen content fertilizer in spring and summer. Potassium helps maintaining the plants compact and healthy.
Watering: Requires careful watering to keep plant compact. Water sparingly from March till October, the thin, fibrous roots suffer if there is humidity, therefore the plant should be watered only when the surrounding terrain is dry. Keep dry as soon as the temperature starts dropping in October and keep it perfectly dry in winter at temperatures from 5 to 15 degrees centigrade.
Hardiness: They need a minimum temperature of 5-10° C (but occasionally temperatures of a few degrees below 0° are not dangerous if kept on the dry side prior to, and during, cold weather). It tends to rot in winter during the resting phase, if kept wet. In the rest period no high atmospheric humidity!!
Sun Exposure: Light shade to full sun, its colour tends to richer and darker when grown in light shade. In a shaded position the plants grow faster, but are not flat shaped and dark coloured.
Uses: It is an excellent plant for container growing. It always looks good and stays small.
Pests & diseases: It may be attractive to a variety of insects, but plants in good condition should be nearly pest-free, particularly if they are grown in a mineral potting-mix, with good exposure and ventilation. Nonetheless, there are several pests to watch for:
- Red spiders: Red spiders may be effectively rubbed up by watering the infested plants from above.
- Mealy bugs: Mealy bugs occasionally develop aerial into the new growth among the wool with disfiguring results, but the worst types develop underground on the roots and are invisible except by their effects.
- Scales: Scales are rarely a problem.
- Rot: Rot is only a minor problem with cacti if the plants are watered and “aired” correctly. If they are not, fungicides won't help all that much. To prevent rottenness it is also advisable to surround its root neck by very rough sand or grit, this help a fast water drainage.
Propagation: With fresh harvested seeds or (rarely) by grafting. Fraileas set seed (when well grown) and grow easily from seed. In fact, they are reported to set seed even if the flower doesn’t open. This self-fertilization is called cleistogamy. Seedlings dislike strong light and dry conditions and need to be repotted frequently during the first few years. However, old plants become senile and have a tendency to succumb to disease and a weak root system. At this stage, as is well known, they die suddenly. So, after they reach about 4-5 cm in diameter grow them slowly, and adopt a new repotting period, using intervals of every 3-4 years. Additionally grow them under drier conditions or with stronger sunlight. But plants are sometine grafted to accelerate growth, but the grafted plants are typical rather tall growing, compared with plants on their own roots that are usually more flat to the ground.