Echinopsis candicans, synonym Soehrensia candicans, is a species of cactus from northern Argentina. It has large fragrant white flowers that open at night.
Echinopsis candicans has a shrubby growth habit, with individual stems up to tall. The plant as a whole can be as much as across. The stems are light green, with a diameter of up to and have 9âÂÂ11 low ribs. The large white areoles are spaced at and produce brownish yellow spines, the central spines being up to long, the radial spines only up to .
The fragrant white flowers open at night. They are large, up to across and long.
The species was first described in print by Joseph zu Salm-Reifferscheidt-Dyck in 1834 in his work Hortus Dyckensis, where he attributed the name Cereus candicans to Gillies. In 1920, Britton and Rose placed the species in Trichocereus. In a 1987 publication, David Hunt transferred the species to the genus Echinopsis, attributing this placement to Frédéric Weber. In 2010, the broad circumscription of Echinopsis was considered to be controversial; the genus was accepted not to be monophyletic. , Plants of the World Online placed it in the genus Echinopsis.
Echinopsis candicans is native to northern Argentina. It is widespread in the Argentine provinces of Mendoza, San Juan, Córdoba, La Rioja, La Pampa, Buenos Aires and San Luis in the foothills of the Andes and Sierras of the Pampas at altitudes of 100 to 2000 meters.
Echinopsis candicans contains 0.5âÂÂ5.0% hordenine, an alkaloid of the phenethylamine class sometimes sold as an ingredient of nutritional supplements.