




Your support is critical to our success.
= Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata
Accepted Scientific Name: Echinopsis cinnabarina
Monogr. Cact. 288. 1853

Origin and Habitat: Garden origin (Nursery produced cultivar)
Synonyms:
Echinopsis cinnabarina (Hook.) Labour.
Monogr. Cact. 288. 1853
Synonymy: 61
- Echinopsis cinnabarina (Hook.) Labour.
- Cinnabarinea cinnabarina (Hook.) F.Ritter
- Echinocactus cinnabarinus Hook.
- Echinocereus cinnabarinus (Hook.) K.Schum.
- Lobivia cinnabarina (Hook.) Britton & Rose
- Cinnabarinea pseudocinnabarina var. microthelis F.Ritter
- Echinopsis cinnabarina var. acanthoplegma (Backeb.) G.D.Rowley
- Cinnabarinea acanthoplegma (Backeb.) F.Ritter
- Lobivia acanthoplegma (Backeb.) Backeb.
- Lobivia cinnabarina subs. acanthoplegma (Backeb.) Rausch
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. acanthoplegma (Backeb.) Rausch
- Pseudolobivia acanthoplegma Backeb.
- Echinopsis cinnabarina var. cheroniana
- Echinopsis cinnabarina var. prestoniana (Cárdenas) E.F.Anderson
- Cinnabarinea prestoana (Cárdenas) F.Ritter
- Lobivia cinnabarina subs. prestoana (Cárdenas) Rausch in Rausch
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. prestoana (Cárdenas) Rausch
- Lobivia prestoana Cárdenas
- Echinopsis cinnabarina var. scheeriana Rud.Mey.
- Echinopsis cinnabarina var. spinosior Rümpler
- Echinopsis cinnabarina subs. taratensis (Cárdenas) G.D.Rowley
- Lobivia acanthoplegma f. taratensis (Cárdenas) J.Ullmann
- Lobivia cinnabarina subs. taratensis (Cárdenas) G.D.Rowley
- Lobivia taratensis Cárdenas
- Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata hort.
- Echinopsis oligotricha (Cárdenas) M.Lowry
- Cinnabarinea oligotricha (Cárdenas) F.Ritter
- Lobivia acanthoplegma var. oligotricha (Cárdenas) Gertel & Wahl
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. oligotricha (Cárdenas) Rausch in Rausch
- Lobivia cinnabarina subvar. oligotricha (Cárdenas) Rausch
- Lobivia oligotricha Cárdenas
- Lobivia acanthoplegma var. patula Rausch
- Lobivia acanthoplegma f. pilosa Rausch
- Lobivia acanthoplegma var. roseiflora Rausch
- Lobivia cinnabarina f. charcasina (Cárdenas) J.Ullmann
- Lobivia charcasina Cárdenas
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. draxleriana (Rausch) Rausch
- Lobivia draxleriana Rausch
- Lobivia prestoana var. draxleriana (Rausch) Šída
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. neocinnabarina (Backeb.) Rausch
- Cinnabarinea neocinnabarina (Backeb.) F.Ritter
- Lobivia acanthoplegma f. neocinnabarina (Backeb.) J.Ullmann
- Lobivia neocinnabarina Backeb.
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. walterspielii (Boed.) Rausch
- Cinnabarinea walterspielii (Boed.) F.Ritter
- Lobivia cinnabarina subvar. walterspielii (Boed.) Rausch
- Lobivia rossii var. walterspielii (Boed.) Backeb.
- Lobivia walterspielii Boed.
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. zudanensis (Cárdenas) Rausch ex G.D.Rowley
- Cinnabarinea zudanensis (Cárdenas) F.Ritter
- Lobivia cinnabarina subvar. zudanensis (Cárdenas) Rausch
- Lobivia zudanensis Cárdenas
- Lobivia pseudocinnabarina Backeb.
- Cinnabarinea pseudocinnabarina (Backeb.) F.Ritter
- Lobivia acanthoplegma f. pseudocinnabarina (Backeb.) J.Ullmann
- Lobivia pseudocinnabarina Backeb.
- Lobivia taratensis var. leucosiphus Cárdenas
- Cinnabarinea acanthoplegma var. leucosiphus (Cárdenas) F.Ritter
- Lobivia cinnabarina var. leucosyphus
- Lobivia taratensis var. leucosiphus Cárdenas
Description: The classical Echinopsis cinnabarinaSN|20963]]SN|9451]] (syn: Lobivia cinnabarinaSN|9455]]SN|9455]]) is a small cactus with a much flattened usually solitary body (sometime forms small few branched clumps). The variegated form (Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegataSN|9451]]SN|20963]]) has sectors, patches or stripes with distinct shades of yellow. A very few variegated plants sprout unpredictably time by time among normal green seedling and are very rare. Plants with variegated stems are often attractive and highly prized.
Stems: Glossy dark green stripped with yellow, spherical broader than high, deprssed and unarmed at apex, up to 15 cm in diameter.
Ribs: It has about 20 ribs spirally arranged, irregular and oblique, with raised to acute tubercles between which the areoles appear.
Areoles: Rounded with short whitish felt.
Radial spines: 8-10, about 1-2 cm long, arranged like little spiders, more or less curved backward, acicular, slender, brownish, turn greyish eventually.
Central spines: None or 1 to 3 stouter, somewhat curved.
Flowers: About 4 to 8 cm broad, near the plant apex, scarlet to deep red and often variegated (with paler strips).
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Echinopsis cinnabarina group
Echinopsis cinnabarina (Hook.) Labour.: has a flattened usually solitary body with spirally arranged ribs, with raised to acute tubercles. Spines arranged like little spiders. Flowers apical, scarlet to deep red. Distribution: Southern Bolivia and Northern Argentina.
Echinopsis cinnabarina var. acanthoplegma (Backeb.) G.D.Rowley: has colourful flower flowers ranging from orange to dark violet-red with contrasting white throat. Distribution: Cochabamba to La Paz , Bolivia.
Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata hort.: Variegated form.
Echinopsis oligotricha (Cárdenas) M.Lowry: is similar in habit to var. acanthoplegma but the flowers tube are typically nearly naked (or with few hairs). Distribution: Arani, Chochabamba, Bolivia.
Lobivia acanthoplegma var. patula Rausch: has more porrect-spreading spines than the var. acanthoplegma. Distribution: Cliza and adjacent areas, Cochabamba, Bolivia.
Lobivia acanthoplegma f. pilosa Rausch: has dense hairy dark carmine flowers up to 50 mm large. Stem single globose with dense yellowish spines, crown slightly depressed. Distribution: Cerro Kara-Kara, Cochabamba.
Lobivia acanthoplegma var. roseiflora Rausch: is somewhat more delicate than the type with shorter spines and smaller pink flowers with contrasting white centre. Distribution: Cochabamba to Santa Cruz, Cochabamba, Bolivia
Lobivia cinnabarina var. draxleriana (Rausch) Rausch: has a very flat body, and paler creamy-yellow spines. Distribution: Cochabamba and Chuquisaca.
Lobivia cinnabarina var. walterspielii (Boed.) Rausch: has a very flat body, longer and more porrect yellowish spines and clear red cup-shaped flower. Distribution: Potosi, between Otuyo and Betanzos.
Bibliography: Major references and further lectures
1) 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
2) David Hunt, Nigel Taylor “The New Cactus Lexicon” DH Books, 2006
3) Edward F. Anderson “The Cactus Family” Timber Press, 2001

Lobivia cinnabarina f. variegata (Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli

Lobivia cinnabarina f. variegata (Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli

Lobivia cinnabarina f. variegata (Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli

Lobivia cinnabarina f. variegata (Echinopsis cinnabarina f. variegata) Photo by: Cactus Art
Cultivation and Propagation: Variegated cacti are regarded as choice and difficult in cultivation, but despite that many of them are relatively easy to grow. But be aware that they cannot tolerate prolonged exposure to direct sun light (especially during the hottest summer days), so grow them in half-shade or under filtered sun. They are sometime seen as grafted plants, but some of this colourful plants (those with some chlorophyll) are able to grow on their own roots and are priced by collectors.
Soil: Use mineral well-permeable substratum with little organic matter (peat, humus).
Watering: Water sparingly from March till October, and keep perfectly dry in winter, at temperatures from 5 to 15 degrees centigrade. (In general these plants are more tender and cannot endure freezing temperatures). In the rest period no high atmospheric humidity!!
Propagation: By seeds, grafting or cutting. Because the variegation is due to the presence of two kinds of plant tissue, propagating the plant must be by a vegetative method of propagation that preserves both types of tissue in relation to each other. A most common way way to cultivate this partially de-coloured cultivars is to graft them onto another cactus which has chlorophyll and which will provide sugar to the mutant scion. The chlorophyll containing bottom part of the graft, called the stock, can be any number of different columnar cactus species.
Remarks: Seeds from variegated parents often give raise to some variegated seedlings too.
Your Actions | |
---|---|
![]() |
Back to Lobivia index |
![]() |
Back to Cactaceae index |
![]() |
Back to Cacti Encyclopedia index |
Privacy stantement - Terms and conditions - How to cite - About us - Feedback - Donate
