taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
733B2D450703FFAE4FC8FBF4FB8FFEED.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349829/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349829	FIGURE 1. Lectotype of Opuntia jamaicensis from St. Catharine, Britton & Harris 10887, included four cladode sections with the typical spathulate shape, separated areoles and greyish spines with flowers, fruit and seeds, deposited at NY. Photo. © New York Botanical Garden.	FIGURE 1. Lectotype of Opuntia jamaicensis from St. Catharine, Britton & Harris 10887, included four cladode sections with the typical spathulate shape, separated areoles and greyish spines with flowers, fruit and seeds, deposited at NY. Photo. © New York Botanical Garden.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450703FFAE4FC8FBF4FB8FFEED.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349831/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349831	FIGURE 2. A coloured drawing of a flowering plant, two flowers, one longitudinal flower section, stamens and style from the type of Opuntia jamaicensis included in Britton & Rose (1919: pl. 19). Photo. R. Mottram.	FIGURE 2. A coloured drawing of a flowering plant, two flowers, one longitudinal flower section, stamens and style from the type of Opuntia jamaicensis included in Britton & Rose (1919: pl. 19). Photo. R. Mottram.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450706FFA84FC8FF00FCCDFBE5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349833/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349833	FIGURE 3. A group of flowering and fruiting cladodes of Opuntia kingstoniana (Opuntia tuna sensu Britton & Rose) with the straight, greyish spines, along the route to Port Royal, at Palisadoes, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo. I. Vandebroek.	FIGURE 3. A group of flowering and fruiting cladodes of Opuntia kingstoniana (Opuntia tuna sensu Britton & Rose) with the straight, greyish spines, along the route to Port Royal, at Palisadoes, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo. I. Vandebroek.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450706FFA84FC8FF00FCCDFBE5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349835/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349835	FIGURE 4. The spreading habitus of Opuntia kingstoniana between the native vegetation, in association with Melocactus caroli-linnaei Taylor (1991: 78) and Neogriseocereus fimbriatus, along the route to Port Royal, at Palisadoes, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo. I. Vandebroek.	FIGURE 4. The spreading habitus of Opuntia kingstoniana between the native vegetation, in association with Melocactus caroli-linnaei Taylor (1991: 78) and Neogriseocereus fimbriatus, along the route to Port Royal, at Palisadoes, Kingston, Jamaica. Photo. I. Vandebroek.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450706FFA84FC8FF00FCCDFBE5.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349837/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349837	FIGURE 5. A photography and a drawing of the materials collected by W. Harris near Kingston in 1913 of Opuntia tuna sensu Britton & Rose (= O. kingstoniana) included in Britton & Rose (1919: 114). Photo. R. Mottram.	FIGURE 5. A photography and a drawing of the materials collected by W. Harris near Kingston in 1913 of Opuntia tuna sensu Britton & Rose (= O. kingstoniana) included in Britton & Rose (1919: 114). Photo. R. Mottram.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450705FFAB4FC8FF00FC38FA01.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349839/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349839	FIGURE 6. Isolectotype of Opuntia hattoniana (= O. repens subsp. taylorii) collected by J.N. Rose 3835, characterized by small, cylindrical, spiny stem sections, deposited at the Hanbury Botanical Gardens Herbarium (HMGBH). Photo. Guiggi & Pastor.	FIGURE 6. Isolectotype of Opuntia hattoniana (= O. repens subsp. taylorii) collected by J.N. Rose 3835, characterized by small, cylindrical, spiny stem sections, deposited at the Hanbury Botanical Gardens Herbarium (HMGBH). Photo. Guiggi & Pastor.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450705FFA54FC8F984FF58FEC9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349841/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349841	FIGURE 7. The lectotype of Opuntia tuna, representing a coloured drawing of a flowering branch composed by two cladodes and a seedling, included in Dillenius (1732: pl. 295 fig. 380). Photo. R. Mottram.	FIGURE 7. The lectotype of Opuntia tuna, representing a coloured drawing of a flowering branch composed by two cladodes and a seedling, included in Dillenius (1732: pl. 295 fig. 380). Photo. R. Mottram.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450705FFA54FC8F984FF58FEC9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349843/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349843	FIGURE 8. Epitype designated here of Opuntia tuna from St. Andrew, collected by Yuncker 17727, including a flowering and fruiting cladode section, characterized by the typical brownish banded and flattened spines of Opuntia dillenii (= O. tuna), deposited at NY. Photo. © New York Botanical Garden.	FIGURE 8. Epitype designated here of Opuntia tuna from St. Andrew, collected by Yuncker 17727, including a flowering and fruiting cladode section, characterized by the typical brownish banded and flattened spines of Opuntia dillenii (= O. tuna), deposited at NY. Photo. © New York Botanical Garden.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450705FFA54FC8F984FF58FEC9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349845/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349845	FIGURE 9. A colour version of the fig. 1 included in Sloane (1725: pl. 224), with the typical pyriform fruits, two entire and one sectioned of Opuntia dillenii (= O. tuna) (BM). Photo. R. Mottram.	FIGURE 9. A colour version of the fig. 1 included in Sloane (1725: pl. 224), with the typical pyriform fruits, two entire and one sectioned of Opuntia dillenii (= O. tuna) (BM). Photo. R. Mottram.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450708FFA14FC8FB04FDD4FADD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349847/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349847	FIGURE 10. The Plumier’s plate 26 from his unpublished Botanicon Americanum (1689–1697) reproduced in Burmann (1758: pl. 195 fig. 1), correisponding to Cereus serrulatus (= Serrulatocereus serrulatus). Photo. R. Mottram.	FIGURE 10. The Plumier’s plate 26 from his unpublished Botanicon Americanum (1689–1697) reproduced in Burmann (1758: pl. 195 fig. 1), correisponding to Cereus serrulatus (= Serrulatocereus serrulatus). Photo. R. Mottram.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
733B2D450708FFA14FC8FB04FDD4FADD.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7349849/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7349849	FIGURE 11. The second sheet of the epitype designated here of Cereus serrulatus represented by Ekman H-5377 specimen sub Cereus repandus (≡ Serrulatocereus serrulatus) from Haiti, Plaine Cul-de-Sac, 18 Dec. 1925, compatible with the reproductive elements included in Plumier’s plate 26, deposited at S. Photo. © Swedish Museum of Natural History.	FIGURE 11. The second sheet of the epitype designated here of Cereus serrulatus represented by Ekman H-5377 specimen sub Cereus repandus (≡ Serrulatocereus serrulatus) from Haiti, Plaine Cul-de-Sac, 18 Dec. 1925, compatible with the reproductive elements included in Plumier’s plate 26, deposited at S. Photo. © Swedish Museum of Natural History.	2022-11-23	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro		Zenodo	biologists	Guiggi, Alessandro;Mariotti, Mauro			
