Aloe, Linnaeus, 1753

Smith, Gideon F. & Klopper, Ronell R., 2021, Aloe × selmarii (Asphodelaceae subfam. Alooideae), a new nothospecies from South Africa, with A. davyana var. davyana and A. parvibracteata as parents, Phytotaxa 521 (4), pp. 289-300 : 295-298

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.521.4.4

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FC8791-FFD6-4758-C080-FE65AC1CB669

treatment provided by

Plazi (2021-10-04 05:35:30, last updated 2023-11-08 04:12:42)

scientific name

Aloe
status

 

Aloe View in CoL View at ENA × selmarii Gideon F.Sm. & Klopper, nothospec. nov. ( Figs. 7–9 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8 View FIGURE 9 ).

Type:— SOUTH AFRICA. Gauteng province.—2528 (Pretoria): Pretoria, Silverton Ridge, a natural habitat of Aloe davyana , with A. parvibracteata cultivated close by, (– CA), 25 August 2020, G. F. Smith 1124 (holotype PRU).

Parentage:— Aloe davyana Schönland (1905: 288) var. davyana × Aloe parvibracteata Schönland (1907: 139)

Diagnosis:—Plants of A. × selmarii, the nothospecies with A. davyana and A. parvibracteata as parents, are low-growing, basally branched, and their rosettes consist of erectly disposed, purple-infused leaves. Inflorescences are branched at or below the middle, with erect, narrowly conical-cylindrical racemes that taper upwards. Flowers of A. × selmarii are dull orange and the perigone segments conspicuously white-margined.

Description:—Plants small, acaulescent, low-growing, branched from base to form clumps of 4–7 rosettes, rarely solitary, rosettes erect to twisted sideways, up to (20–) 30 cm tall. Stem ± absent, short, thickened lower down if present, clothed in persistent, twisted, dried leaves. Leaves densely rosulate, at first erect, then horizontally spreading, dark green, purplish-infused, deltoid-lanceolate, 12–20(–30) cm long, 6–7 cm broad at base, upper ⅓ dried, twisted; lower surface pale green, sometimes distinctly white-spotted, smooth, longitudinally purple-lined, lines narrow, somewhat confluent; upper surface with numerous irregularly scattered, elongated H-shaped to ± oblong whitish spots, sometimes arranged in broken transverse bands; margins concolorous to light brown, armed with prominent, short, very pungent, deltoid, shiny light to dark brown teeth, straight or variously curved towards leaf base or tip, ± 4–5(–7) mm long, 7– 10(–15) mm apart. Inflorescence single, sometimes two produced per rosette per season, unbranched raceme or more commonly 2- to 4-branched panicle, (0.6–)0.8–1.0(–1.2) m tall, erect, branched at or above middle, branches erect at rather narrow angle from peduncle. Peduncle rather stout; lacking sterile bracts below racemes, panicle branches subtended by prominent fertile bracts; fertile bracts irregularly lanceolate-triangular, ± 20–60 mm long, drying rapidly, dull light brown to creamy white, distinctly longitudinally dark brown-lined. Racemes narrowly conical-cylindrical, tapering upwards, 20–30 cm long, ± 6–7 cm wide where flowers are at anthesis, often rather densely flowered; buds erect to erectly spreading, flowers pendulous at anthesis. Floral bracts narrowly lanceolate, variously twisted, ± 5–10 mm long, shorter than pedicels, drying rapidly, light brown to greyish brown, much narrower than fertile bracts. Flowers: pedicellate, pedicels 15–20 mm long, pinkish orange; perianth: buds orange, dark green-tipped; open flowers ± 30–35 mm long, ± 6–7 mm across ovary, narrowed above ovary to yield bulbous base, ± straight to down-curved, slightly enlarged towards mouth, middle ± cylindrical, orange; margins of perigone segments with greyish white longitudinal sections in upper ⅓; tips of segments very slightly flared, outer segments free for ½ of their length; stamens with filiform-flattened filaments, uniformly light yellowish white, exserted for <1 mm; ovary 8–9 mm long, 2–3 mm in diameter, light green; style eventually slightly exserted, uniformly light yellow; stigma tiny, very slightly capitate, white. Fruit a capsule, 20–25 × 10–13 mm, dull mid-green to purplish green, dry remains of perigone soon shed. Seed not seen. Chromosome number: unknown.

Eponymy:— Aloe × selmarii is named for Prof. Dr Selmar Schonland (15August 1860 [Frankenhausen, Germany]– 22 April 1940 [Grahamstown, South Africa]) ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). He obtained a Ph.D. from Kiel University in Germany and in 1889 emigrated to South Africa where he was Director of the Albany Museum in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Schonland described both A. davyana and A. parvibracteata , the parents of A. × selmarii. Schonland is also commemorated in A. × schoenlandii Baker (1902: 430), as ‘ Schönlandi ’, pro sp. [ A. maculata Allioni (1773: 13) × A. striata Haworth (1804: 18) ], which is a synonym of A. × schimperi Todaro (1878: 70, plate 16) ( Figueiredo & Smith 2016: 14).

Schonland’s surname was originally spelt with an ‘umlaut’ on the ‘o’, as in ‘Schönland’, but Schonland himself later dropped the diacritical sign, preferring the spelling ‘Schonland’ ( Gunn & Codd 1981: 318). The standardised form of his surname in the authorship of nomenclatural novelties is ‘Schönland’, with the ‘umlaut’ therefore retained ( Brummitt & Powell 1992: 573; see also https://www.ipni.org/a/9219-1).

With more than a passing interest in succulents, Schonland described many new species in the families Crassulaceae and Asphodelaceae , including publishing around 20 aloe names (see for example Schönland 1904, 1905, 1907). The Schonland Herbarium in Grahamstown is also named for him.

Allioni, C. (1773) Auctarium ad synopsim methodicam stirpium horti regii taurinensis. Melanges de Philosophie et de Mathematique de la Societe Royale de Turin pour les annees 1770 - 1773 V: 53 - 96.

Baker, J. G. (1902) New or noteworthy plants. Aloe (Eualoe) Schonlandi, Baker *. The Gardeners' Chronicle, series 3, 32: 430. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / item / 83820 # page / 494 / mode / 1 up]

Brummitt, R. K. & Powell, C. E. (1992) Authors of plant names. A list of authors of scientific names of plants, with recommended standard forms of their names, including abbreviations. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 732 pp.

Figueiredo, E. & Smith, G. F. (2016) Aloe × schimperi Tod. (Aloe maculata All. × Aloe striata Haw.), the earliest name applicable to the common and invasive nothospecies known as Aloe × schoenlandii Baker (Asphodelaceae: Alooideae). Haseltonia 22: 9 - 17. https: // doi. org / 10.2985 / 026.022.0103

Gunn, M. & Codd, L. E. (1981) Botanical exploration of southern Africa. An illustrated history of early botanical literature on the Cape flora. Biographical accounts of the leading plant collectors and their activities in southern Africa from the days of the East India Company until modern times. A. A. Balkema, Cape Town, 400 pp.

Haworth, A. H. (1804) A new arrangement of the genus Aloe, with a chronological sketch of the progressive knowledge of that genus, and of other succulent genera. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 7: 1 - 28. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / page / 756222 # page / 45 / mode / 1 up]

Schonland, S. (1904) On some new and some little known species of South African plants. II. Records of the Albany Museum 1: 114 - 124. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / item / 31254 # page / 132 / mode / 1 up]

Schonland, S. (1905) On some South African species of Aloe with special reference to those represented in the Herbarium of the Albany Museum. II. Records of the Albany Museum 1: 282 - 295. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / item / 31254 # page / 308 / mode / 1 up]

Schonland, S. (1907) On some new and some little known species of South African plants belonging to the genera Aloe, Gasteria, Crassula, Cotyledon and Kalanchoe. Records of the Albany Museum 2: 137 - 155.

Todaro, A. (1878 [1876 -]) Hortus Botanicus Panormitanus. Vol. 1. Cyri Visconti & Francisci Lao, Palermo, 64 pp. + XL plates.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 7. The leaves of Aloe ×selmarii are purple-infused, but also, like those of A. davyana, borne erectly, not near-horizontal as in A. parvibracteata. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 8. Racemes of Aloe ×selmarii are more conical than those of A. davyana, so more closely resembling those of A. parvibracteata. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 9. Flowers of Aloe ×selmarii are a lighter shade of orange than those of the orange-flowered-form of A. parvibracteata. The perigone segments are noticeably white-margined, a character more often found in A. davyana. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.

Gallery Image

FIGURE 10. Prof. Dr Selmar Schonland (1860–1940) for whom Aloe ×selmarii is named. Photographer unknown. © Selmar Schonland Herbarium, Albany Museum, Grahamstown.

CA

Chicago Academy of Sciences

G

Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques de la Ville de Genève

F

Field Museum of Natural History, Botany Department

PRU

University of Pretoria