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{{SPlantbox
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|genus=Cylindropuntia
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|species=whipplei
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|Temp Metric=°F
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|jumpin=If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks!
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|image_width=240
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Opuntia whipplei, Engelm. & Bigel. Fig. 2609 (adapted from Pacific R. R. Report). A spreading, sub-prostrate shrub, rarely more than 2 ft. high, with numerous ascending secondary branches, having short, crowded, prominent tubercles: joints variable, terminal ones clavate, 2-5 in. long and ⅔-¾ in. thick, mostly armed on upper half: areoles with short white wool and a few short, light-colored bristles; spines white, very variable, on terminal joints, usually from 1-3 conspicuous loose-sheathed interior ones and several small, deflexed or radiating ones: fls. greenish yellow, crowded at the ends of the joints, 1-1¼ in. wide: fr. unarmed or with few spines, pyriform to subglobose, densely tuberculate, yellow or tinted with scarlet, ½-1 in. diam., drying and remaining attached to the plant during the winter. S. W. U. S. and N. W. Mex.—This plant is frequently confused with O. spinosior, probably from confusion in the original description.
 
Opuntia whipplei, Engelm. & Bigel. Fig. 2609 (adapted from Pacific R. R. Report). A spreading, sub-prostrate shrub, rarely more than 2 ft. high, with numerous ascending secondary branches, having short, crowded, prominent tubercles: joints variable, terminal ones clavate, 2-5 in. long and ⅔-¾ in. thick, mostly armed on upper half: areoles with short white wool and a few short, light-colored bristles; spines white, very variable, on terminal joints, usually from 1-3 conspicuous loose-sheathed interior ones and several small, deflexed or radiating ones: fls. greenish yellow, crowded at the ends of the joints, 1-1¼ in. wide: fr. unarmed or with few spines, pyriform to subglobose, densely tuberculate, yellow or tinted with scarlet, ½-1 in. diam., drying and remaining attached to the plant during the winter. S. W. U. S. and N. W. Mex.—This plant is frequently confused with O. spinosior, probably from confusion in the original description.
 
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