Aloe candelabrum, A.Berger
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.25223/brad.n34.2016.a21 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7866509 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6D4B87DF-FF9E-FFCC-FD70-7DFAFC41C82D |
treatment provided by |
Cynbaloyi |
scientific name |
Aloe candelabrum |
status |
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Differences between mature specimens of Aloe candelabrum View in CoL and Aloe ferox
Aloe candelabrum View in CoL is characterised by its tall [2–4(–8)m high], erect, unbranched stem covered in a ‘beard’ of persistent, dried leaves, with a terminal rosette of long (ca. 100 × 15cm), spreading to often recurved, deeply channelled leaves ( Figure 1 View Figure 1 ) that sometimes bear a few scattered spines on the lower surface, especially at the tip of the keel. The reddish to reddish-brown marginal teeth are pungent and ca. 3mm long ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ). The candelabrum-like inflorescence is 5- to 12- branched with erect, very dense, cylindrical, slightly acuminate racemes 50–80cm long, with the terminal raceme sometimes slightly longer than the lateral ones ( Figures 1 View Figure 1 and 3 View Figure 1 ). Flowers are scarlet, sometimes rose-pink, orange-red ( Figure 4 View Figure 4 ) to orange ( Figure 5 View Figure 5 ), and ca. 32mm long, always with white inner segment tips ( Figures 4 View Figure 4 and 5 View Figure 5 ) ( Table 1 View Table 1 ). Very rarely they are white ( Figure 6 View Figure 6 ).
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Figure 8. Pungent reddish-brown spines along the leaf margins of Aloe ferox, Nieu Bethesda , Eastern Cape province. Photograph: Neil R. Crouch. View Figure
In the eastern parts of the Eastern Cape province and southern parts of KwaZulu-Natal, and from the Mtamvuna valley through to Ixopo, Aloe candelabrum and A. ferox seemingly intergrade. This is evidenced by some populations having plants with more erect leaves ( Figures 12 View Figure 12 and 13) or slightly recurved ones ( Figure 14 View Figure 14 ), and A. ferox -like spines along both leaf margins and undersides ( Figure 15 View Figure 15 ). We speculate that it is on this basis that Jeppe (1969) considered A. ferox to occur from south of Ixopo. However, within this southern KwaZulu-Natal region white perianth apices are always evident, an observation also noted by Viljoen et al. (1996). Where the distribution ranges of related Aloe species meet, such intergradations are not uncommon, as noted for A. spectabilis ( Klopper & Smith, 2010).
In Aloe candelabrum the teeth on the leamargins are quite short and stout, about 3mm long, and spaced 15–20mm apart ( Figure 2 View Figure 2 ), while in A. ferox the teeth are generally larger and more prominent, up 6mm long, and often more closely spaced at 10–20mm distant ( Figure 8 View Figure 8 ).
Geographical distribution ranges of Aloe candelabrum and Aloe ferox Both species are confined to either southern Africa ( Aloe ferox ) or South Africa ( Aloe candelabrum ), with Aloe ferox predominating in the Western and Eastern Cape provinces of South Africa, extending northwestwards into the Free State province, as well as southern Lesotho. It does not occur in KwaZulu-Natal, and no specimens are known from the Northern Cape province, even though it occurs close by the juncture of that territory with both the Western and Eastern Cape provinces ( Figure 16 View Figure 16 ).
Aloe candelabrum , on the other hand, is confined to southeast-central KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, where it is more or less restricted to the northern and western aspects of valleys of all river systems from the Mtamvuna northwards to the Mngeni. This species in its typical form is a particularly prominent component of the landscape of the Mkomazi River system, and those to the north. The entire distribution range of Aloe candelabrum falls within the Maputoland-Pondoland Region of Endemism on the eastern seaboard of South Africa (Van Wyk & Smith, 2001). Along the actual KwaZulu-Natal coastline, Aloe candelabrum is replaced by Aloe thraskii Baker, which is also a robust, tall-stemmed species, albeit with shorter, more dense inflorescences. Within the range of A. ferox in the Eastern Cape, from north of Port Elizabeth to near Humansdorp, Aloe africana Mill. occupies a comparable niche in the littoral zone. However, unlike A. thraskii , A. africana also occurs at locations in the interior (see maps in Van Wyk & Smith, 2014: 52 [ A. africana ] and 80 [ A. thraskii ]).
A single specimen known to us (A.T.D. Abbott 7003 [NH]) locates a tree-like aloe with white tepal tips in the extreme north of the Eastern Cape province, near Mbizana, on a ridge above the Mtamvuna River at an altitude of 640m. The colony from which the specimen (comprising a raceme branch only) was gathered in 1996 was recorded as a mixture of orange, red and whiteflowered plants. As the original collecting label indicates that the flowers were from a white-flowering plant, we are unable to determine whether this material represents A. ferox or A. candelabrum . Until the colony is revisited and assessed, we deem A. candelabrum to be documented only from KwaZulu-Natal province; it is though highly likely to occur to the immediate south in Eastern Cape province. Albinistic blooms such as those noted at Mbizana are seldom reported for A. candelabrum , but have been observed both at Izingolweni and Ashburton ( Figures 6 View Figure 6 and 17 View Figure 17 ), in the south and the northwest of its range, respectively.
# | Character | Aloe candelabrum | Aloe ferox |
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1 | Rosette | Very large (c. 2m diam.) | Medium-sized to large (<2m diam.) |
2 | Leaf length | c. 1m | <1m rarely to 1m |
3 | Leaf curvature / disposition | Spreading to often gracefully re- curved, occasionally erect | Erect to somewhat spreading, seldom recurved |
4 | Inflorescence structure | Up to 12 raceme branches | Not more than 8 raceme branches |
5 | Tepal apices colour | Lighter, white-tipped. Outer slightly darker than inner | Darker, brown-tipped. Outer always lighter than inner |
6 | Inner tepal apices disposition | Flared, filaments free | Not flared, often clasp filaments |
7 | Distribution range | East-central KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa | Western Cape, Eastern Cape, and Free State provinces of South Africa; Lesotho |
Table 1. Differences between mature specimens of Aloe candelabrum and Aloe ferox .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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