The lava cactus is a species of cactus, Brachycereus nesioticus, the sole species of the genusBrachycereus. The plant is a colonizer of lava fields – hence its common name – where it forms spiny clumps up to tall. Its solitary white or yellowish white flowers open in the daytime. It is endemic to the Galápagos Islands.
Description
The lava cactus is a leafless clump-forming species, with cylindrical stems typically up to tall in formations that can be as much as across. The stems have 16–22 ribs and are yellow, with green or brown tones. Each areole has up to 40 spines, up to long, initially yellowish, but becoming darker with age. The flowers are borne singly, and are narrowly funnel-shaped, up to long and across, with many spines on the lower part of the flower. They open in the daytime and are white to yellowish white inside. The remains of the flower stay attached to the fruit, which is a berry, red to brown in colour, covered with yellow spines and filled with many black seeds.
Taxonomy
The species was first described in 1902 as Cereus nesioticus by Karl Moritz Schumann in an account of the flora of Galápagos authored by Benjamin Lincoln Robinson. In 1920, Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose erected the genus Brachycereus, synonymizingCereus nesioticus and another cactus from the Galápagos, Cereus thouarsii, under the name Brachycereus thouarsii. In 1935, Curt Backeberg realized that only Cereus nesioticus belonged in Brachycereus Brachycereus means "short cereus"; nesioticus is derived from the Ancient Greek νησιωτικός, meaning "of the islands".
Molecular studies show that the two endemic Galápagos genera, Brachycereus and Jasminocereus, are sisters, with their closest relative being the South American mainland species Armatocereus: In one widely used classification of cacti, Brachycereus is placed in the tribe Trichocereeae of the subfamily Cactoideae, while Armatocereus and Jasminocereus are placed in the tribe Browningieae, which is inconsistent with the cladogram above. A classification produced in 2010 by Nyffeler and Eggli puts all three genera in a much larger tribe Phyllocacteae.
Brachycereus nesioticus was rated as "vulnerable" in the IUCN Red List of 2000, but this was downgraded to "least concern" in 2013. As with all plants and animals of the Galápagos, collecting or disturbing the lava cactus is strictly controlled by the Ecuadorian government; the complete range of the species lies within the Galápagos National Park and Natural World Heritage Site. Trade in the species is controlled under CITES Appendix II.