Summary details for Opuntia rufida

Blind prickly pear

Common names: Blind Prickly Pear; Cinnamon bunny-ears

Origin: Texas and Mexico

Shrubby succulent up to 1.5 m high and 2.5 m wide. Cladodes flattened, ovate to almost round, grey-green to blue-green, lacking spines but very finely velvety and carrying numerous dense pads (‘areoles’) of red-brown to dark brown glochids (extremely irritating bristles that float off easily when disturbed, and can cause severe eye problems in humans and animals). Cladodes often grow in pairs, giving the appearance of bunny ears. Flowers pale yellow, becoming golden yellow to orange with age; stigma dark green. Fruit spineless, finely hairy, green ripening to bright red, ovoid to nearly globular, about 2.5 cm long, with many areoles bearing dense glochids.
 

Similar species: This species is often confused with Opuntia microdasys, which has yellow glochids. Some people regard them as different varieties of the same species.

Photo: Coleen Mannheimer
Photo: Coleen Mannheimer
Photo: Chris Brown
Photo: Chris Brown
Photo: Chris Brown
Photo: Chris Brown

Photos and media

Similar species

Blind prickly pear

Photo: Coleen Mannheimer
© Photo: Coleen Mannheimer

Bunny-ear prickly pear

Photo: Coleen Mannheimer
© Photo: Coleen Mannheimer