Echinocereus acifer
Echinocereus acifer is a species of Echinocereus found in Mexico
Description
The plant sprouts from the base, forming small cushions of 5 to 8 stems. The dark green, cylindrical plant body grows to a height of and a diameter of. It has 9 to 12 heavily warty, tuberous ribs. The tomentose areoles on new shoots are apart and about in diameter. The thorns are yellow to reddish-brown, later turning gray, with up to 5 central spines surrounded by 10 to 15 radiating marginal spines.Buds emerge from a woolly white pad with reddish-brown bristles. The funnel-shaped flowers are red on the outside and yellow on the inside, rarely crooked, and measure long with a diameter of up to. Unlike the monoecious flowers of Echinocereus polyacanthus, the flowers of Echinocereus acifer are hermaphroditic and self-pollinating. The stamens are yellow, and the stigma is green to light green. The oval fruits remain greenish, measuring in diameter and in length.