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Holiday Cacti : ウィキペディア英語版
Schlumbergera

''Schlumbergera'' is a small genus of cacti with six species found in the coastal mountains of south-eastern Brazil. Plants grow on trees or rocks in habitats that are generally shady with high humidity, and can be quite different in appearance from their desert-dwelling cousins. Most species of ''Schlumbergera'' have stems which resemble leaf-like pads joined one to the other and flowers which appear from areoles at the joints and tips of the stems. Two species have cylindrical stems more similar to other cacti. In Brazil, the genus is referred to as ' (May flower), reflecting the period in which they flower in the Southern Hemisphere.
This genus contains the popular house plants known by a variety of names including Christmas Cactus, Thanksgiving Cactus, Crab Cactus and Holiday Cactus, which are ''Schlumbergera'' cultivars, and flower in white, pink, yellow, orange, red or purple. (The Easter Cactus or Whitsun Cactus, which may also be called a Holiday Cactus and has vivid scarlet flowers in the most commonly grown form, is now placed in the genus ''Hatiora''.) The cultivars of ''Schlumbergera'' fall into two main groups:
* The Truncata Group contains all cultivars with features derived mainly from the species ''S. truncata:'' stem segments with pointed teeth; flowers held more or less horizontally, usually above the horizontal, whose upper side is differently shaped from the lower side (zygomorphic); and pollen which is yellow. They generally flower earlier than members of the Buckleyi Group and although common names are not applied consistently may be distinguished as Thanksgiving Cactus, Crab Cactus or Claw Cactus.
* The Buckleyi Group contains all cultivars with at least some features clearly showing inheritance from ''S. russelliana:'' stem segments with rounded, more symmetrical teeth; more or less symmetrical (regular) flowers which hang down, below the horizontal; and pollen which is pink. They generally flower later than members of the Truncata Group and are more likely to be called Christmas Cactus.
==Description==
In the wild, the species of ''Schlumbergera'' grow either on trees (epiphytic) or on rocks (epilithic) and can form sizeable shrubs with woody bases; a height of up to has been reported for one species (''S. opuntioides''). They are leafless, the green stems acting as photosynthetic organs. The stems are composed of segments, which take one of two forms. In most species the segments are strongly flattened (cladodes), being made up of a central core with two (or more rarely three) "wings". Special structures characteristic of cacti, called "areoles", then occur at the ends of the segments of the stem. In two species the stems are less flattened, more cylinder-shaped, and the areoles are arranged in a more or less spiral pattern all over the segments. In both cases, the areoles, which may have wool and bristles, are where the flower buds appear.〔, particularly pp. 18–19〕
The flowers either hang downwards and are almost regular (radially symmetrical or actinomorphic) or, as in most species, are held more or less horizontally with the higher side of the flower different from the lower side (radially asymmetrical or zygomorphic). In those species whose flowers are held up, their angle with the horizontal is relatively constant and is characteristic of the species. Each flower has 20–30 tepals. The outer tepals – those closer to the base of the flower – are short and unconnected, and spread out or curve backwards. The inner tepals – those towards the tip of the flower – are longer and become progressively more fused together at the base to form a floral tube. In some species the difference between the outer and inner tepals creates the appearance of a "flower within a flower". The flowers produce nectar in a chamber at the base of the floral tube.〔
The many stamens are arranged in two series, which is a distinctive characteristic of the genus. The inner stamens are fused at the base to form a short tubular structure. The outer stamens arise from along the floral tube. The style is usually dark red and has a stigma with 6–8 lobes; the style plus stigma is roughly the same length as the stamens. If the flower is fertilized, a fleshy fruit forms, either smooth or with ribs. The brown or black seeds are about 1 mm in diameter.〔
==Taxonomy==
The genus is one of a small number belonging to a group of cacti classified as the tribe Rhipsalideae. Species of cacti belonging to this group are quite distinct in appearance and habit from most other cacti since they grow on trees or rocks as epiphytes or lithophytes. Although the species are easy to identify as members of the Rhipsalideae, for many years there was confusion as to how they should be divided into genera. This confusion extended to ''Schlumbergera'', whose complicated taxonomic history has been detailed by McMillan and Horobin. The modern genus ''Schlumbergera'' was created by Charles Lemaire in 1858. The name commemorates Frédéric Schlumberger, who had a collection of cacti at his chateau near Rouen. Lemaire placed only one species in his new genus – a plant discovered in Brazil in 1837 which had been named ''Epiphyllum russellianum'' by William J. Hooker. Lemaire renamed it ''Schlumbergera epiphylloides'' (under the current rules of botanical nomenclature it should have been called ''Schlumbergera russelliana'', which is its current name).〔
Lemaire noted the similarity of his ''Schlumbergera epiphylloides'' to a species first described as ''Epiphyllum truncatum'' by Adrian Hardy Haworth in 1819, but did not accept that the two species should be included in the same genus. In 1890, Karl Moritz Schumann created the new genus ''Zygocactus'',〔 transferring ''Epiphyllum truncatum'' to ''Zygocactus truncatus''. Although he later placed it back in ''Epiphyllum'', abandoning ''Zygocactus'', the generic name ''Zygocactus'' continued to be widely used.〔
In 1913, Nathaniel Britton and Joseph Rose followed Lemaire in keeping ''Schlumbergera russelliana'' and ''Zygocactus truncatus'' in separate genera. (They also transferred the Easter Cactus – now ''Hatiora gaertneri'' – to ''Schlumbergera'' as ''S. gaertneri'', initiating a lasting confusion between these two genera.)〔
In 1953, Reid Venable Moran placed both ''Schlumbergera russelliana'' and ''Zygocactus truncatus'' in the genus ''Schlumbergera''. Other species were added later by David Hunt, including those formerly placed in ''Epiphyllanthus'', to form the modern total of six full species and a number of hybrids.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Schlumbergera」の詳細全文を読む



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