Edit History
Aloe chabaudii [family ALOACEAE]
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
South African National Biodiversity Institute, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town (SAM)
Collection
Flora of Southern Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of South Africa, (2003) Author: Dr J.P. Roux
Names
Aloe chabaudii [family ALOACEAE]
Common names
A. chabaudii Schonland var. verekeri Christian: t. 699 (1938b); Reynolds: 342 (1950); Reynolds: 107 (1966); West: 62 (1974). Type: Zimbabwe, Sabi Gorge, Vereker PRE23027 (PRE!).
Information
Plants stemless or short-stemmed, 300-500 mm tall excluding inflorescence, forming large dense groups. Leaves ± 20 per rosette, biconÂvex, 300-500 x 60-110 mm, grey-green to glaucous green, upper surface sometimes with few spots. Inflorescence a panicle 0.6-1.0 m tall; racemes capitate to cylindric, lax to sub-dense; bracts deltoid, 3.0-5.0 x 1.5-3.0 mm, 3-5-nerved. Flowers scarlet to brick-red, 18-40 mm long; outer segments free for 4-8 mm, inner segments free but dorsally adnate to outer; pedicels 19-25 mm long. Anthers exserted 1-2 mm. Ovary 6.0-7.0 x 2.0-2.5 mm, brownish green; style exserted 2-A mm. Fruit ±21 x 12 mm. Flowering time June to July. Figure 14.
Habitat
The leaves of this species are sometimes spotted, but the flowers lack the inflated flower base which is characteristic of section 9, Pictae. Instead, the flower tube is trigonously indented near the base. The nearest relatives of A. chaÂbaudii are probably A. milne-redheadii and A. mzimbana, both of which occur in northern Zambia and Malawi. A. chabaudii is at once distinguished from A. suffulta (no. 79) by its stoloniferous habit, usually unspotted or only obscurely spotted, spreading to incurved leaves and relatively short (up to 1 m tall) nonclimbing inflorescence.
Use
80. Aloe chabaudii Schonland in The GarÂdeners' Chronicle 3, 38: 102 (1905c); A.Berger: 244 (1908); Pole Evans: t. 164 (1925a); Reynolds: 339 (1950); Reynolds: 23 (1954); Reynolds: 102 (1966); Jeppe: 6 (1969); Born-man & D.S.Hardy: 185 (1972); West: 53 (1974); B.-E. van Wyk & G.F.Sm.: 128 (1996). Type: Zimbabwe, no precise locality, Schonland s.n. (GRA!).
Range
Found in Botswana, the Northern Province, Mpumalanga, Swaziland and KwaZulu-Natal; also in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. A. chabaudii var. mlanjeana is reÂstricted to Malawi and therefore not treated here. A. chabaudii usually grows on bare rock on granitic domes, or in shallow soil pockets. It is very variable in climatic requirements, but it is frost-sensitive. Map 56.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
South African National Biodiversity Institute, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town (SAM)
Collection
Flora of Southern Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of South Africa, (2003) Author: Dr J.P. Roux
Names
Aloe chabaudii [family ALOACEAE]
Common names
A. chabaudii Schonland var. verekeri Christian: t. 699 (1938b); Reynolds: 342 (1950); Reynolds: 107 (1966); West: 62 (1974). Type: Zimbabwe, Sabi Gorge, Vereker PRE23027 (PRE!).
Information
Plants stemless or short-stemmed, 300-500 mm tall excluding inflorescence, forming large dense groups. Leaves ± 20 per rosette, biconÂvex, 300-500 x 60-110 mm, grey-green to glaucous green, upper surface sometimes with few spots. Inflorescence a panicle 0.6-1.0 m tall; racemes capitate to cylindric, lax to sub-dense; bracts deltoid, 3.0-5.0 x 1.5-3.0 mm, 3-5-nerved. Flowers scarlet to brick-red, 18-40 mm long; outer segments free for 4-8 mm, inner segments free but dorsally adnate to outer; pedicels 19-25 mm long. Anthers exserted 1-2 mm. Ovary 6.0-7.0 x 2.0-2.5 mm, brownish green; style exserted 2-A mm. Fruit ±21 x 12 mm. Flowering time June to July. Figure 14.
Habitat
The leaves of this species are sometimes spotted, but the flowers lack the inflated flower base which is characteristic of section 9, Pictae. Instead, the flower tube is trigonously indented near the base. The nearest relatives of A. chaÂbaudii are probably A. milne-redheadii and A. mzimbana, both of which occur in northern Zambia and Malawi. A. chabaudii is at once distinguished from A. suffulta (no. 79) by its stoloniferous habit, usually unspotted or only obscurely spotted, spreading to incurved leaves and relatively short (up to 1 m tall) nonclimbing inflorescence.
Use
80. Aloe chabaudii Schonland in The GarÂdeners' Chronicle 3, 38: 102 (1905c); A.Berger: 244 (1908); Pole Evans: t. 164 (1925a); Reynolds: 339 (1950); Reynolds: 23 (1954); Reynolds: 102 (1966); Jeppe: 6 (1969); Born-man & D.S.Hardy: 185 (1972); West: 53 (1974); B.-E. van Wyk & G.F.Sm.: 128 (1996). Type: Zimbabwe, no precise locality, Schonland s.n. (GRA!).
Range
Found in Botswana, the Northern Province, Mpumalanga, Swaziland and KwaZulu-Natal; also in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. A. chabaudii var. mlanjeana is reÂstricted to Malawi and therefore not treated here. A. chabaudii usually grows on bare rock on granitic domes, or in shallow soil pockets. It is very variable in climatic requirements, but it is frost-sensitive. Map 56.
Date Updated: 19 August 2007
Herbarium
South African National Biodiversity Institute, Compton Herbarium, Cape Town (SAM)
Collection
Flora of Southern Africa
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of South Africa, (2003) Author: Dr J.P. Roux
Names
Aloe chabaudii [family ALOACEAE]
Common names
A. chabaudii Schonland var. verekeri Christian: t. 699 (1938b); Reynolds: 342 (1950); Reynolds: 107 (1966); West: 62 (1974). Type: Zimbabwe, Sabi Gorge, Vereker PRE23027 (PRE!).
Information
Plants stemless or short-stemmed, 300-500 mm tall excluding inflorescence, forming large dense groups. Leaves ± 20 per rosette, biconÂvex, 300-500 x 60-110 mm, grey-green to glaucous green, upper surface sometimes with few spots. Inflorescence a panicle 0.6-1.0 m tall; racemes capitate to cylindric, lax to sub-dense; bracts deltoid, 3.0-5.0 x 1.5-3.0 mm, 3-5-nerved. Flowers scarlet to brick-red, 18-40 mm long; outer segments free for 4-8 mm, inner segments free but dorsally adnate to outer; pedicels 19-25 mm long. Anthers exserted 1-2 mm. Ovary 6.0-7.0 x 2.0-2.5 mm, brownish green; style exserted 2-A mm. Fruit ±21 x 12 mm. Flowering time June to July. Figure 14.
Habitat
The leaves of this species are sometimes spotted, but the flowers lack the inflated flower base which is characteristic of section 9, Pictae. Instead, the flower tube is trigonously indented near the base. The nearest relatives of A. chaÂbaudii are probably A. milne-redheadii and A. mzimbana, both of which occur in northern Zambia and Malawi. A. chabaudii is at once distinguished from A. suffulta (no. 79) by its stoloniferous habit, usually unspotted or only obscurely spotted, spreading to incurved leaves and relatively short (up to 1 m tall) nonclimbing inflorescence.
Use
80. Aloe chabaudii Schonland in The GarÂdeners' Chronicle 3, 38: 102 (1905c); A.Berger: 244 (1908); Pole Evans: t. 164 (1925a); Reynolds: 339 (1950); Reynolds: 23 (1954); Reynolds: 102 (1966); Jeppe: 6 (1969); Born-man & D.S.Hardy: 185 (1972); West: 53 (1974); B.-E. van Wyk & G.F.Sm.: 128 (1996). Type: Zimbabwe, no precise locality, Schonland s.n. (GRA!).
Range
Found in Botswana, the Northern Province, Mpumalanga, Swaziland and KwaZulu-Natal; also in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe. A. chabaudii var. mlanjeana is reÂstricted to Malawi and therefore not treated here. A. chabaudii usually grows on bare rock on granitic domes, or in shallow soil pockets. It is very variable in climatic requirements, but it is frost-sensitive. Map 56.
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