Aloidendron is a very small genus of seven tree aloes in the family Asphodelaceae, described as recently as 2013, ranging from South Africa to Mozambique, with a large disjunction to Somalia, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Aloidendron barberae is recorded from South Africa, Swaziland and southern Mozambique. However, the records for Mozambique are queried here and it is suggested that these actually relate to its closest relative, Aloidendron tongaense, a smaller tree only 4-8 m tall, which may be endemic to Mozambique. Aloidendron barberae is the largest alooid, growing to 20 m tall and is copiously dichotomously branched. Its taxonomic and nomenclatural history are outlined. Its habitat, natural distribution, ecology and cultivation are disc...
Aloe jacksonii and A. elkerriana are narrow Ethiopian endemics and although they apparently comes fr...
Aloe forbesii, first described in 1903, is a small Socotran endemic with a chequered history. This i...
A review of the attractive small-growing Aloe bakeri, and notes on the South African botanical artis...
Aloidendron barberae is the largest of the tree aloes growing up to 20m tall. Its history is briefly...
Aloidendron barberae is the largest of the tree aloes growing up to 20 m tall. Its history is briefl...
Aloe tomentosa is unusual within the huge diversity of this large genus, since it is one of a small ...
Aloe cremnophila is one of 37 species of the genus recorded from Somalia. It is described in cultiva...
Aloe cremnophila and A. jacksonii are described and illustrated as obligate cremnophytes, namely pla...
The history of the discovery of Aloe pluridens Haw (Asphodelaceae: Alooideae) by the Kew collector J...
Newton (2011) published two new species of endemic Kenyan Aloes: Aloe tegetiformis and Aloe springat...
The history and natural distribution of Aloe littoralis are discussed and the species is described b...
Aloe spectabilis is a single-stemmed species that is endemic to the central part of KwaZulu-Natal, S...
The history and natural distribution of Aloe elegans are discussed and the species is described both...
A new species of Aloe (Asphodelaceae) is described from Somaliland. It differs from other species in...
A new species of Aloe (Asphodelaceae) is described from Somaliland. It differs from other species in...
Aloe jacksonii and A. elkerriana are narrow Ethiopian endemics and although they apparently comes fr...
Aloe forbesii, first described in 1903, is a small Socotran endemic with a chequered history. This i...
A review of the attractive small-growing Aloe bakeri, and notes on the South African botanical artis...
Aloidendron barberae is the largest of the tree aloes growing up to 20m tall. Its history is briefly...
Aloidendron barberae is the largest of the tree aloes growing up to 20 m tall. Its history is briefl...
Aloe tomentosa is unusual within the huge diversity of this large genus, since it is one of a small ...
Aloe cremnophila is one of 37 species of the genus recorded from Somalia. It is described in cultiva...
Aloe cremnophila and A. jacksonii are described and illustrated as obligate cremnophytes, namely pla...
The history of the discovery of Aloe pluridens Haw (Asphodelaceae: Alooideae) by the Kew collector J...
Newton (2011) published two new species of endemic Kenyan Aloes: Aloe tegetiformis and Aloe springat...
The history and natural distribution of Aloe littoralis are discussed and the species is described b...
Aloe spectabilis is a single-stemmed species that is endemic to the central part of KwaZulu-Natal, S...
The history and natural distribution of Aloe elegans are discussed and the species is described both...
A new species of Aloe (Asphodelaceae) is described from Somaliland. It differs from other species in...
A new species of Aloe (Asphodelaceae) is described from Somaliland. It differs from other species in...
Aloe jacksonii and A. elkerriana are narrow Ethiopian endemics and although they apparently comes fr...
Aloe forbesii, first described in 1903, is a small Socotran endemic with a chequered history. This i...
A review of the attractive small-growing Aloe bakeri, and notes on the South African botanical artis...