Species

Nyctocereus serpentinus

Nyctocereus serpentinus

Nyctocereus serpentinus

Nyctocereus serpentinus (Lag. & Rodr.) Britton & Rose is treated as an accepted taxon in Plants of the World Online.1

The current source-backed classification places it in Cactaceae within Nyctocereus.12

Its recorded native range/source remark is MXEAG, MXECU, MXEGU, QLDCS, MXNBS, MXSMI, MXSJA, MXSCL, AUSTRALASIA, MXCDF, NORTHERNAMERICA, MXE_DU; Mexico.1

POWO records the plant context as scrambling succulent subshrub or shrub, seasonally dry tropical.1

This is a source-populated draft intended for later Kaktus Doktoru editorial rewriting; care advice and morphology should be reviewed before publication.

References

  1. Plants of the World Online. "Nyctocereus serpentinus (Lag. & Rodr.) Britton & Rose". Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Accessed: 2026-06-10. https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:171152-2
  2. GBIF Secretariat. "Nyctocereus serpentinus". GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Accessed: 2026-06-10. https://www.gbif.org/species/7280516

Plants In This Group

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Nyctocereus serpentinus?
Nyctocereus serpentinus is a species-level taxonomy entry identified by the scientific name Nyctocereus serpentinus.
Which rank is Nyctocereus serpentinus?
Nyctocereus serpentinus is shown as a species in our botanical dictionary.
Which groups sit below Nyctocereus serpentinus?
No lower taxonomy landing pages are currently shown for Nyctocereus serpentinus.
Are there plants related to Nyctocereus serpentinus?
Yes. Related dictionary entries include Nyctocereus serpentinus.
Is this taxonomy page a care guide?
No. This page explains scientific classification; light, watering, and safety guidance belongs on individual plant pages.
Is Nyctocereus serpentinus a product category?
No. This is a scientific taxonomy record. Product categories are organized separately around customer search intent.
Why is the Latin name shown?
The Latin scientific name reduces ambiguity between common names across languages and regions.
Where can I see the parent ranks?
The taxonomy card shows the parent ranks of Nyctocereus serpentinus inside the scientific hierarchy.
Can this page change over time?
Yes. Taxonomy and dictionary content can be updated as botanical data, greenhouse observations, and collection records improve.
Why is this different from a plant detail page?
This page explains a classification node. Individual plant pages contain care notes, collection links, and practical growing information.