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perennial

Echinomastus johnsonii (Parry ex Engelm.) E.M. Baxter

Echinomastus johnsonii (Parry ex Engelm.) E.M. Baxter

Sclerocactus johnsonii
Photo: Stan Shebs · CC BY-SA 3.0

Echinomastus johnsonii (Parry ex Engelm.) E.M. Baxter. Sclerocactus johnsonii is a species of cactus known by the common names Johnson's beehive cactus and Johnson's fishhook cactus. It is native to the southwestern United States from eastern California to Utah and northwestern Mexico, where it can be found in desert scrub habitat. It produces an egg-shaped or cylindrical stem up to 25 centimetres tall by 10 centimetres wide. It is covered densely in straight and curving spines which may be up to 4 centimetres long and come in shades of yellow, gray, lavender, and pink or red, with up to 24 per areole. The cactus may have yellow or pink flowers; the species is sometimes divided into two varieties on the basis of flower color. Flowers are up to 8 centimetres wide. The scaly, fleshy fruit is up to 1.8 centimetres long.

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Echinomastus johnsonii (Parry ex Engelm.) E.M. Baxter — seeds, tools & books

Native range

Native range not recorded for this plant. Often a non-native cultivar or naturalized garden plant.

Sources