Plants photographed elsewhere in Namibia (not on Kyffhäuser)
  Home   >   Flora   >   List of families   >   List of genera   >   List of species   >   Asphodelaceae / Aloe asperifolia

Aloe asperifolia A.Berger


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Aloe asperifolia

Image 1
Habit
20 Sep 2013

Aloe asperifolia

Image 2
Dried flowers
20 Sep 2013

Aloe asperifolia

Image 3
Habit
20 Sep 2013

Aloe asperifolia

Image 4
Habit
21 Mar 2020

Aloe asperifolia

Image 5
Flowers
21 Mar 2020

Aloe asperifolia

Image 6
Habitat
21 Mar 2020



Family: Asphodelaceae
Full name: Aloe asperifolia A.Berger
ID status: Fairly certain
Afrikaans common name(s): Kraalaalwyn, Heksekringe
English common name(s): Sandpaper aloe
Synonym(s): -
Status: Endemic
Description: Plants in solid groups of 20-40, 150-300 mm tall. Leaves lanceolate, erect, 150-250 x 35-70 mm, greyish to almost white. Inflorescence 2- or 3-branched, oblique, 500-750 mm long; racemes sublax, cylindric; bracts deltoidacuminate, 10-15 x 3-4 mm, 3-5-nerved. Flowers scarlet, 19-28 mm long, mouth upturned; outer segments free for 6-10 mm, inner segments dorsally adnate to outer for 12-18 mm; pedicels 5-8 mm long. Anthers exserted 3-10 mm. Ovary 6-8 x 2-3 mm, deep olive-green; style exserted 3-10 mm. Fruit ± 20 x 13 mm, subglobose, pale grey-brown. Flowering time March to May Aloe asperifolia is endemic to northern Namibia and occurs on limestone and conglomerate in parts of the Namib Desert which are not only devoid of other plant life, but almost devoid of soil. Most of the moisture available to plants of this species is derived from fog. Map 49. This species is very similar to A. claviflora (no. 70). The inflorescence in this species is almost always branched, whereas in A. claviflora it very seldom branches, and the peduncle is much stouter in A. asperifolia, with much laxer racemes than in A. claviflora. The bracts of A. asperifolia are papery, not fleshy, and are much smaller than those of A. claviflora. The flowers of A. asperifolia are almost cylindric, with slightly upturned mouths, whereas those of A. claviflora are straight and clavate. In A. falcata (no. 69), which is similar in habit, the inflorescences are erect and the flowers are straight and cylindric. (from JSTOR Global Plants website / Flora of Southern Africa)
Link(s) African Plant Database
JSTOR Plant Science
Kew Herbarium Catalogue
BGBM Berlin-Dahlem - Virtual Herbarium
Züricher Herbarien
iNaturalist (Namibia / Alex Dreyer)
iNaturalist (Namibia)
iNaturalist (southern Africa)
Flora of Zimbabwe
Fleurs de notre Terre - Galerie Namibie
Tree Atlas of Namibia
Content last updated: 18 Apr 2024


Note: The identification of some of the plants on this website is not 100% certain. Any comments will be highly appreciated. I would also be willing to supply higher resolution images upon request. Please contact me at the e-mail address given below.

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