Accepted Scientific Name: Mammillaria uncinata Zucc. ex Pfeiff.
Enum. Diagn. Cact. 34. 1837 Pfeiff.

Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Origin and Habitat: Widely distributed in Mexico ( Hidalgo, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, Morelos, Puebla, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Durango, Queretaro, Guanajuato, Zacatecas, Aguascalients, Michoacan and Jalisco)
Habitat: Grows at 1.500 - 2.800 m in altitude.
Synonyms:
See all synonyms of Mammillaria uncinata
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Accepted name in llifle Database:Mammillaria uncinata Zucc. ex Pfeiff.Enum. Diagn. Cact. 34. 1837Synonymy: 11
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Description: Solitary or slowly offsetting cactus.
Stems: Dark blue-green, 6 - 10 cm high, 8 - 10 cm in diameter. In the wild it grows very flat, but under cultivation it grows as globular as any other.
Radial spines: 3 - 6, upper ones shorter and stronger, straight or slightly curved, pinkish to greyish white, 5 - 6 mm in length.
Central spines: 1, hooked, pinkish grey to dark purplish brown, with dark tips, up to 10 mm long.
Flowers: Funnel-form, yellowish or creamy white, with brownish mid-veins, 15 - 20 mm long, up to 15 mm in diameter, in spring and summer.
Fruits: Cylindrical to club shaped, purplish red to red, 15-18 mm long in summer.
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli
Neomammillaria uncinata (Mammillaria uncinata) Photo by: Valentino VallicelliCultivation and Propagation: It is a rapidly growing species . Water regularly in summer, but do not over-water (rot prone). Use pot with good drainage and a very porous potting media. Keep dry in winter. Feed with a high potassium fertilizer in summer. It is quite frost resistant if kept dry, hardy as low as -5° C (some reports give it hardy to -12°C). Outside full sun or afternoon shade, inside it needs bright light, and some direct sun.
Easily clustering and easily flowered. Most plants will offset readily, and clumps can be produced in a very few years.
Propagation: : Direct sow after last frost.