Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
This is one of the prettiest and showy monstrous Mammillaria. It has close woolly white proliferations and yellow bristles in the axils.
Origin and Habitat: Garden origin (Nursery produced cultivar)
Synonyms:
Description: Mammillaria cv. CettinaSN|13729]]SN|13729]] forms large, proliferating, white woolly stems with very short yellow bristles.
It shows an abnormal uncoordinated form of vegetative growth, with a multitude of condensed lateral proliferation, each areole gives origin to a new stem only a few centimeters across, and plant looks more like a strange furry animal or a marine creature than a cactus.
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Mammillaria cultivars group
- Mammillaria cv. Blando I.Blando: Has very odd pectinated spines, that varies in number and density depending on clones.
- Mammillaria cv. Caterpincy: has very reduced bristly or absent spines. It offsets from the base to form a small cluster or mound. It is very similar to: Mammillaria crinita subs. painteri f. monstruosa (if not the same)
- Mammillaria cv. Cettina: It shows an abnormal uncoordinated form of vegetative growth, with a multitude of condensed lateral proliferation and plant looks more like a strange furry animal than a cactus.
- Mammillaria cv. Chiara Blando I.Blando: has extremely elongated areoles, 7-20 mm long and 3-5 mm broad, which are conspicuous, in relief, densely covered with dull white felt and few tiny white bristles.
- Mammillaria hybrid cv. Dolichothele x Un Pico: a supposed hybrid between a Dolichothele longimamma and Mammillaria spinosissima cv. Un Pico. It has orange and yellow central spines that are a thin, little flat, flexible but not hooked.
- Mammillaria hybrid cv. Toumeya x knippelianus: it is an improbable hybrid between a Toumeya papyracantha and Echinocereus knippelianus or more likely a monstrous form of Mammillaria. Central spines orange, flexible, flat with a bent tip.Radial spines glassy white, bristly.
Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Cactus Art Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Cactus Art Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Cactus Art Mammillaria cv. Cettina Photo by: Cactus Art Cultivation and Propagation: This plant is grown exclusively grafted. Keep well ventilated, protect from frosts and freezes. Give plenty of light to keep plant compact, but avoid direct sun exposure in the hottest part of the day during the summer.
Your Photos
by Valentino Vallicelli
by Cactus Art
by Cactus Art