List of edible cacti

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Zacatecas
, Mexico

This is a list

Cactaceae
.

  • Acanthocereus tetragonus, the sword pear,
  • Browningia candelaris,[2]
  • Carnegiea gigantea
    , the Saguaro,
  • Cereus repandus - California and Florida
  • genus Corryocactus (also known as Erdisia), the tasty berrylike
    • C. brevistylis, C. pulquiensis, and C. erectus
  • Coryphantha
    • C. robbinsorum and C. recurvata.
  • genus Echinocereus ("Strawberry Cactus")
    • E. engelmannii, E. bonkerae, E. boyce-thompsonii
    • E. enneacanthus, E. cincerascens, E. stramineus
    • E. dasyacanthus, E. fendleri and E. fasciculatus
    • E. brandegeei, E. ledingii and E. nicholii
    • E. engelmannii ("Strawberry Vanilla")
  • genus Echinopsis
    • South American species
      • E./T. schickendanzii
  • genus Epiphyllum, the Orchid cactus
    • E. anguliger
      (also called Phyllocactus darrahii, said to be like gooseberries)
  • genus Epithelantha (the fruit of all species said to be edible)
  • genus Eulychnia
    • E. acida
  • genus Ferocactus
  • genus Harrisia (of Florida and the Caribbean), the "Prickly Apples"
    • NOTE: The following 5 are said to be "endangered endemic" :
      • H. aboriginum, H.simpsonii, H. adscendens, H fragrans and H. eriophora
      • H. pomanensis
      • Argentinian H. balansae
  • genus Mammillaria ("chilitos" as they look like tiny red chili peppers)
    • M. applanata, M. meiacantha, M. macdougalii, M. lasiacantha
    • M. grahamii, M. oliviae, M. mainiae, M. microcarpa, M. thornberi and many others
  • Maihuenia
  • Myrtillocactus geometrizans ("garambulos", taste like less-acid cranberries)
  • Neowerdermannia vorwerkii , the achakana
Cultivated prickly pear grown for food

References

  1. ^ Marmaro, John P. "What cacti produce edible fruit or are edible?". GardenWeb.
  2. , p. 134
  3. ^ "Harrisia Cactus". HerbiGuide. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  4. ISBN 1-55105-088-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
  5. ^ "Cahuilla Plants". enduringknowledgepublications.com.
  6. ^ "Temalpakh Ethnobotanical Garden". malkimuseum.org. Archived from the original on 2008-05-15.