Thelocactus bicolor

Thelocactus bicolor, the glory of Texas, is a species of flowering plant in the cactus family, widely  distributed in the northern Chihuahuan Desert of Texas and Mexico.

Description
Plants are usually solitary, but may form clumps. It typically grows to about 6 to 10 centimeters in diameter, growing to 50 cm tall, it is a perennial with succulent stems with a blue or gray-green body that is somewhat felty at the top and often thorny. The cactus has 8 to 13 straight or twisted ribs, each divided into crookedly truncated cusps up to 1.5 centimeters high. It also has 9 to 18 marginal spines that are protruding or slightly curved and up to 3 centimeters long, as well as 1 to 4 central spines that are all up to 3 centimeters long. The central spines are brightly colored, white or reddish in the middle, or red at the base and yellow at the tip, gradually becoming grayish with age. The lowest central spine is stretched out and prim, while the upper ones are erect and flat. Large daisy-like flowers, 5-8 cm in diameter with ciliate edges, are borne in summer. The petals are purplish-pink, fading to white. The inner petal tips form a circle of red surrounding a prominent yellow boss. The fruits are reddish-brown, scaly, and edible.

Distribution
These plants are primarily found in the northern Chihuahuan desert in Texas and Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Tamaulipas, Zacatecas) at elevations of 800-2200 meters. They typically grow on flat gravelly soils, limestone or sandstone slopes of hills or outcrops, and alluvial fans in desert or grassland environments.

Taxonomy
The first description of Thelocactus bicolor was made in 1848 by Ludwig Karl Georg Pfeiffer. The specific epithet "bicolor" comes from Latin, meaning 'two-colored,' and refers to the two-colored flowers of the species. Nathaniel Lord Britton and Joseph Nelson Rose placed the species in the genus Thelocactus in 1922.

Subspecies
Accepted Subspecies

Cultivation
This cactus is grown as an ornamental. A warm, dry, sunny spot in sharply-drained specialist cactus compost must be provided. It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.