The genus was described by
Nathaniel Lord Britton and
Joseph Nelson Rose in 1907. Species known at that time had been variously placed in either
Opuntia or
Pereskia. Two were first described in
Pereskia in 1828, and transferred to
Opuntia in 1898 under the section
Pereskiopuntia. The genus name means like
Pereskia, being derived from the genus name
Pereskia plus the Greek-derived ending -
opsis meaning 'appearance'.
Pereskia is named after
Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc, a 16th-century French botanist. Some sources have used the incorrect spelling
Peireskiopsis.
Phylogeny Pereskiopsis is placed in the tribe Cylindropuntieae of the subfamily Opuntioideae. A 2016
molecular phylogenetic study of the tribe suggested the relationships shown in the following cladogram, where the genera
Quiabentia and
Pereskiopsis are basal to the main clade of
Grusonia and
Cylindropuntia. However, only two species of
Pereskiopsis were included, and the status of
Micropuntia pulchella remains uncertain. The author of the study suggested it be recognized as
Micropuntia pulchella, although it could be another species of
Pereskiopsis. However,
M. pulchella has deciduous leaves, unlike the persistent leaves characteristic of
Pereskiopsis. }} ==Species==