“…The decrease in germination of Cuban Leptocereus species that inhabit dry or semi‐arid environments in response to decreasing water potential was stronger than that of other cactus species. In 28 cacti studied at −0.4 MPa water potential, the mean of germinability was about 50% (see Barrios, et al, 2020), with several species exhibiting a germinability between 55 and 100% at this water potential, for example, Ferocactus histrix (Flores et al, 2017), Gymnocalycium mostii (Gurvich et al, 2017), Trichocereus candicans (Mazzola, Cenizo, & Kin, 2013), Neobuxbaumia tetetzo and Neobuxbaumia macrochephala (Ramírez‐Padilla & Valverde, 2005), Pilosocereus arrabidae (Martins, Pereira, Carvalho, Barros, & De Andrade, 2012), Polaskia chichipe , Polaskia chende , Myrtillocactus schenckii and Escontria chiotilla (Guillén, Casas, & Rodríguez‐Morales, 2015), Mammillaria gaumeri (Cervera, Andrade, Simá, & Graham, 2006), Cereus jamacaru subsp. jamacaru (Meiado et al, 2010) and Selenicereus undatus (Ortiz, Gomes, Takahashi, Urbano, & Strapasson, 2014, respectively), or even an increase in seed germination at −0.4 MPa, for example, Pachycereus hollianus (Flores & Briones, 2001) and Echinocactus platyacanthus (Flores et al, 2017).…”