Operation WildflowerOperation Wildflower
    • Albums
    • Home
    • Links
      • National Botanical Gardens
      • Parks, Gardens & Reserves
      • Sites of Interest
    • Search
    • Information
      • About Us
      • Articles
      • Contact Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Glossary
      • Sources of Information
      • Subject Index
      You are here:  
    1. Home
    2. Most Viewed Items
    3. GENERA A
    4. Aloe
    5. Aloe khamiesensis rosette and dry leaves

    Aloe khamiesensis rosette and dry leaves

    Aloe khamiesensis rosette and dry leaves
    Author: Ivan Lätti
    Photographer: Thabo Maphisa

    The leaf rosette of Aloe khamiesensis is compact and many-leaved. The leaf colour, in picture yellow-green, is often dull grey-green. The narrow leaves curve up gracefully in similar shape as they taper to acutely pointed tips.

    Tall panicles of up to eight conical racemes form the inflorescence that appears in about the first half of winter. There were no sign of flowers when the photo was taken in August after a very dry winter. The racemes become up to 30 cm long. The individual perianths (flowers) of A. khamiesensis are orange-red, their tips yellow-green. The cylindrical to triangular perianth tubes are up to 3,5 cm long.

    There are small bracts below the pedicels of the individual flowers. The bracts are thin with many veins visible upon their brown surfaces. The pedicels (stalks) of the perianths are up to 2,5 cm long at the bottom end of the raceme, gradually shorter up its length (Frandsen, 2017; Le Roux, et al, 2005; Van Wyk and Smith, 2003; Reynolds, 1974; Jeppe, 1969; iNaturalist).

    Previous
    Total Hits : 875
    Next

    Off Canvas Menu

    • Albums
    • Home
    • Links
      • National Botanical Gardens
      • Parks, Gardens & Reserves
      • Sites of Interest
    • Search
    • Information
      • About Us
      • Articles
      • Contact Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Glossary
      • Sources of Information
      • Subject Index