Accepted Scientific Name: Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus (F.Ritter) Lodé
Fichier Encycl. Cact. Autres Succ., Sér. 17: no. 1583 (1996) Repert. Pl. Succ. (I.O.S.), 47: 11 (1996 publ. 1997)
Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Frikkie Hall
The stems arw chiefly covered with silky white hairs and yellow spines. It grows well.
Origin and Habitat: Oreocereus doelzianusSN|5963]]SN|5963]] var. sericatus grows in the department of Ayacucho, central Peru, on the western cordillera.
Altitude: 2300-2500 metres above sea level.
Habitat: This plants occurs in high altitudes mainly in the eastern slopes together with Tephrocactus sp. and are covered with wool as a protection against the cold. The flowers are bright red and zygomorphic, suggesting that they are pollinated by birds.
Synonyms:
See all synonyms of Oreocereus doelzianus
Common Names include:
ENGLISH: Old Man of the Andes
Description: In recent times Morawetzia sericataSN|6097]]SN|6097]] has been referred to Oreocereus (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus), but differing from other Oreocereus in forming a cephalium of wool and long bristles on the ends of the flowering shoots. The flowers are carmine. They form low colonies of slender cerei with many erect stems, branched from the base or a little above ground.
Stem: Bright green with blunt ribs that protrude less than 1 cm and are slightly prominent where the areoles are borne. Stems up to about 1 m tall x 6-8 cm in diameter.
Areoles: Circular, greyish-white and felted, separated by slight depressions, 1,5 cm apart.
Spines: Stems are covered in long, white, hair-like, silky spines without bristle tufts, (which becomes more dense in strong light) to protect them from the mountain cold and hot sun. Hidden in this white down are up to 20, to 3 cm long, stout, needle-like spines yellow or straw-coloured. 4 long centrals sometime develops later.
Flowers: Has deep purplish pink, vermilion-red blossoms to about 10 x 3 cm. Scales of tube with numerous loose axillary hairs, limb oblique with rounded petals.
Fruit: Ovoid to spherical, yellowish or greenish opening basally.
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Oreocereus doelziarius group
- Oreocereus doelzianus (Backeb.) Borg: Cylindrical stems freely branching basally covered in white wool. Spines yellow to dark brown. Produces terminal cephalia with long white woolly hairs and whitish yellow bristles. Flowers borne from the cephalia, bluish carmine red. Distribution: central Peru.
- Oreocereus doelzianus subs. calvus (Rauh & Backeb.) Mottram
- Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus (F.Ritter) Lodé: Stems are covered in long, white, hair-like spines (which becomes more dense in strong light) to protect them from the mountain cold and hot sun. Hidden in this white down are long, needle-like spines straw-coloured.
- Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus f. cristata: Attractive species that forms beautiful crest covered in long, white, hair-like spines (which becomes more dense in strong light)
Notes: This plant was previously included in the segregate genus Morawetzia (Backeb.) that differ from Oreocereus because of the apical cephalium consisting of hairs and bristles and becoming clavate at the apex. Flowers arise from this cephalium.
Bibliography: Major references and further lectures
1) Cáceres, F. & Ostalaza, C. 2013. Oreocereus doelzianus. In: IUCN 2013. "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species." Version 2013.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 17 February 2014.
2) David Hunt, Nigel Taylor “The New Cactus Lexicon” DH Books, 2006
3) Edward Anderson “The Cactus family” Timber Press, Incorporated, 2001
4) 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
5) Margaret J. Martin, Peter Richard Chapman, Hugh Ambrose Auger "Cacti and their cultivation" Scribner's, 1975
Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Frikkie Hall Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Prof. Ilham Alakbarov Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Frikkie Hall Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Frikkie Hall Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Frikkie Hall Morawetzia sericata (Oreocereus doelzianus var. sericatus) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Cultivation and Propagation: This is a frost hardy cactus that grow at high altitude (hardy to -12°C) It need full sun exposures. Grow in a rich, porous and draining soil and let their soil dry out between waterings. Repot in the spring, when their roots become cramped. Generally, they should be repotted every other year in order to provide fresh soil. After repotting, do not water for a week or more.
Propagation: Sedds, cuttings.