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Peniocereus fosterianus

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One way of propagating is those shoots which quite easily break of.

Author: Ladislaus Cutak, 1945
Family:  CACTACEAE
Origin:  Guerrero; Southern Mexico
Soil:  Grit
Water:  Minimum
Sun:  Medium - Maximum
Thickness:  12 Centimetres
Height:  1,2 Meters
Flower:  White
Propagate:  Seeds/Cuttings
Names:  -
Synonyms:  Acanthocereus fosterianus, Lodé, 2013.
Peniocereus fosterianus
var. multitepalum, Sánchez-Mej.
Peniocereus fosterianus
var. nizandensis, Sánchez-Mej.

This member of the Cactaceae family was described by Ladislaus Cutak in 1945. It is found in Guerrero in southern Mexico, growing in grit with little water and some to much sun. The caudex can grow up to twelve centimetres in diameter, the leaves/stems up to 1,2 meters long. The nocturnal flowers are large and white.

The genera name from pene; 'thread' and Cereus; another member of the Cactaceae family, as to plant's form. The species name after Mulford B. Foster, 1888-1978, an US-American plantsman and Bromeliad specialist.


P. fosterianus var. nizandensis by Juergen Menzel, Cactiguide.com.