Selenicereus undatus - Pitahaya Red skin White pulp

Rooted cutting of 20-25 cm. Red pitahaya is the most popular in cultivation. Its best pollen-mate is H.purpusii. The name of the species is for its undulate or wavy margins of the ribs.

Más detalles

Nuevo

21,70 €

Producto en stock

Canarius Plants Lovers

Al comprar este producto puede obtener hasta 10 puntos de fidelidad.


Climbing cactus with excellent fruits. Red pitahaya is the most cultivated species in the genus. The native origin of the species has never been resolved. The name of the species is for its undulate or wavy margins of the ribs. Stems creeping, sprawling or clambering, branching profusely, of 0,5-1 m (1,7-3 ft) long or more. Three ribs generally, with margins corneous in age and undulate, and spines on adult branches. Flowers are nocturnal, scented, greenish yellow or whitish, rarely tinged rose. It flowers in summer or autumn. Fruits are oblong to ovoid, to 6-13 cm (2.5-5 "), red with large wings (bracteoles), the pulp is white, edible, with black seeds. It is an easily cultivated plant, with fast growing epiphyte or xerophyte. Is the most spread type of pitahaya and is used both as an ornamental vine and as a fruit crop. Pitahaya needs a pollinating mate of a different Hylocereus species, in order to fruit properly. Canarius offers other Pitahaya species.

The actual size of this plant is: Rooted cutting of 20-25 cm.

Picture of the fruit from wikimedia commons:
De Emőke Dénes - kindly granted by the author, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72059197

Cultivada Protegido
Origen de la especie América
Forma presentación A raíz desnuda
Tamaño Máx. 200cm-400cm
Familia Botánica Cactaceae
Luz Sol
Temperatura mínima invierno 5 ºC a 10 ºC
Tipo de planta Herbácea
Cuidados Maceta
Forma Cactus y Similares
Aviso Importante-Debido a nuestra larga experiencia como exportadores e importadores, les informamos que todos los pedidos que lleguen después del 16 de noviembre de 2023 serán enviados después de la segunda semana de enero de 2024, para evitar cualquier posible pérdida o retraso en la entrega debido al excesivo tráfico de paquetes navideños.