Rare endemic wild chili species exclusive to the Galápagos Islands of Ecuador, known for its densely hairy aromatic foliage and tiny round very hot red fruits. Grown primarily as an ornamental collector's item due to specific growing needs mirroring the islands' mild foggy climate.
The Galápagos Pepper (Capsicum galapagoense) is a distinctive wild Capsicum species found only in the Galápagos Islands off the coast of Ecuador. It forms a small bushy shrub typically 50-120 cm tall with a growth habit similar to C. annuum but distinguished by its dense silvery pubescence covering stems, leaves, and pedicels. The leaves are small and release a strong pleasant fragrance when touched. Flowers are small, erect, stellate, white with yellow anthers. Fruits are very small, round to slightly compressed, starting dark green and ripening to bright red, with thin skin and significant heat. It belongs to the Capsicum annuum complex and is closely related to wild forms such as C. annuum var. glabriusculum and C. chacoense, with which it can reportedly cross. Native to the unique mild equatorial climate of the islands' upper humid highlands with seasonal garúa fog, it is challenging to cultivate elsewhere, often struggling with blooming, fruit set, and cold sensitivity. Primarily valued by enthusiasts for its ornamental qualities and rarity rather than common culinary production, though the fruits are edible.
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Capsicum galapagoense is an endemic wild species unique to the Galápagos Islands of Ecuador, likely dispersed naturally to the archipelago. Part of the Capsicum annuum complex and closely related to certain wild bird peppers, it has evolved in the islands' mild equatorial climate featuring seasonal dry periods with garúa fog in the humid highlands. Its striking hairy aromatic leaves and tiny hot fruits make it a prized rarity among pepper collectors, though it remains difficult to reproduce reliably in cultivation outside native-like conditions.
Slightly acidic with a rounded rich flavor, touches of fruitiness, and fresh grassy notes; the mature fruits deliver strong heat.
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