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Fragile pricklypear

Also known as: Brittle pricklypear

Opuntia fragilis (Nutt.) Haw.

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Fragile pricklypear
Fragile pricklypear
Fragile pricklypear
Fragile pricklypear

Morphology

Stem
Plants prostrate to ascending, forming clumps or mats. Stem segments readily detaching, green, succulent, nearly cylindric to flattened, elliptic-obovoid, .6 to 2.4 inches long, .4 to 1.2 inch wide, tuberculate, not glaucous; areoles oval, wool white.
Leaves
Cylindric or narrowly conic, succulent, soon deciduous. Spines abundant, on most areoles, 3-8 per areole, gray, spreading, straight, strongly barbed, .08 to 1 inch; glochids inconspicuous, tan to brown, up to .12 inch long.
Flower
Flowers rarely produced, when present borne on marginal areoles of old stem segments; tepals yellow or greenish yellow, inner sometimes basally red; filaments white or red; anthers yellow; style white; stigma lobes green.
Fruit
Tan, ovoid, .4 to 1.2 inch long, .3 to .6 inch wide, dry; seeds tan to gray, flattened, oblong to nearly circular, .2 to .24 inch, margin wavy, .04 to .06 inch.

Ecology

Habitat
Sandy or gravelly shortgrass, sandsage, and sand prairies
Distribution
West 1/2 of Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

Fragile pricklypear is inconspicuous. By late summer or fall, the season's new segments have matured and will detach easily from the plant. If caught in fur or clothing, the segments can be transported long distances before falling to the ground and rooting. Opuntia, uncertain etymology, and fragilis, fragile, alluding to the ease with which segments detach.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Wildflower
Family
Cactaceae - Cactus Family
Life Span
Perennial
Height
.8 to 4.8 inches
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2021-11-19
Color Groups
Yellow Wildflowers
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: June, July