Aloe minima Baker
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.142.48365 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C44A0AC6-FE62-54BF-B0EE-35B4C145E68F |
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scientific name |
Aloe minima Baker |
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Common names.
Pink grass aloe (English); isipukushane, isipukutwane, isiputuma, isiphuthumane, isiphukhutshane (Zulu).
Description.
Grass aloe, 0.2-0.3 m high. Acaulescent plants; rosettes single, erect. Leaves rosulate, suberect, rather rigid, green, lower surface with copious slightly tuberculate-spinulescent spots towards base, linear, 25-35 cm long, 0.4-0.6 cm wide; margin ciliate, with minute whitish teeth in lower half, up to 0.5 mm long, 1-2 mm apart; exudate clear. Inflorescence 0.25-0.50 m high, erect, simple. Raceme capitate, ± 3 cm long, dense. Floral bracts 5-12 mm long, 3-5 mm wide. Pedicels 10-20 mm long. Flowers: perianth dull pink, 10-11 mm long, ± 3-4 mm across ovary, narrowing towards upturned mouth, basally stipitate, cylindric-trigonous; outer segments free to base; stamens and stigma not or only slightly exserted.
Flowering time.
January-February.
Habitat.
Hilly and mountainous grassland on fairly heavy soils with loose stones.
Diagnostic characters.
Aloe minima can be distinguished from other grass aloes in KwaZulu-Natal with unkeeled leaves that are usually narrower than 3.5 cm and that lack a bulb-like underground swelling ( Aloe dominella , Aloe linearifolia , Aloe micracantha , Aloe nicholsii , Aloe parviflora and Aloe saundersiae ), by the short inflorescence (0.25-0.50 m high) with dense, capitate racemes and pedicels 10-20 mm long. The peduncle is smooth (without prickles as in Aloe parviflora ). Flowers are small (10-11 mm long) and dull pink, with a spreading, upturned mouth. The rosulate leaves (25-35 × 0.4-0.6 cm) are suberect and rather rigid, with copious slightly tuberculate-spinulescent spots towards the base on the lower surface. Rosettes are solitary.
Conservation status.
Least Concern ( Raimondo et al. 2009).
Distribution.
Occurs from the far northern parts of the Eastern Cape, just south of Port Edward, widespread through KwaZulu-Natal and along the Great Escarpment into Mpumalanga, South Africa and western Eswatini (Fig. 24 View Figure 24 ).
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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