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Description
aristata succulent Aristaloe aristataAristaloe aristata Aristaloe aristata, often called lace aloe, is a compact rosette forming succulent with dark green triangular leaves, white spots and soft bristly margins. It grows as a tight cluster of small rosettes, gradually producing offsets around the base as the plant matures. The plant has a neat, star like form and a tactile surface created by raised white markings and fine marginal teeth. Mature plants can send up slender flowering stems
Aristaloe aristata
Aristaloe aristata, often called lace aloe, is a compact rosette-forming succulent with dark green triangular leaves, white spots and soft bristly margins. It grows as a tight cluster of small rosettes, gradually producing offsets around the base as the plant matures.
The plant has a neat, star-like form and a tactile surface created by raised white markings and fine marginal teeth. Mature plants can send up slender flowering stems with tubular orange to reddish-orange blooms in season.
Aristaloe aristata quick features
- Compact rosettes of triangular, fleshy green leaves
- White spotting, bristly margins and soft pointed leaf tips
- Clumping growth through offsets around the mother rosette
- Orange to reddish-orange tubular flowers on mature plants
- Bright-light succulent for gritty substrate and measured watering
Rosette growth and natural range
Aristaloe aristata is the sole species in the genus Aristaloe and belongs to Asphodelaceae. It was long grown under the older name Aloe aristata.
The species is native to southern Africa, with records across South Africa and Lesotho. Its natural habitats include grassland, Nama Karoo and rocky terrain, so the plant is adapted to bright exposure, mineral drainage and periods where the root zone dries between rain events.
Aristaloe aristata care
- Light: Give bright light with gentle direct sun. Indoors, a very bright window usually produces tighter rosettes and clearer markings.
- Watering: Water thoroughly, then let the substrate dry well before watering again. In winter, water much less often.
- Substrate: Use a gritty succulent mix with mineral components such as pumice, lava rock, coarse sand or perlite.
- Drainage: Choose a pot with drainage holes. Dense, moisture-holding soil increases the risk of root and crown problems.
- Temperature: Keep frost-free indoors. A cool, bright winter position is suitable when the plant is kept mostly dry.
- Humidity: Average indoor humidity is fine. The plant prefers airflow around the rosette and dry leaf surfaces.
- Feeding: Feed lightly in spring or early summer with a diluted cactus or succulent fertiliser.
- Repotting: Repot when offsets crowd the pot or the substrate has compacted. Keep the crown above the surface.
- Propagation: Remove offsets once they have their own roots, then pot them into a dry, gritty mix before watering lightly.
- Winter watering: Water less in cool, darker months and let the gritty mix dry well between waterings.
Aristaloe aristata troubleshooting
- Soft centre: Check for water trapped in the rosette and wet substrate. Improve airflow and keep watering directed at the mix.
- Stretching: A taller, looser rosette usually points to low light. Increase brightness gradually.
- Wrinkled leaves: This can follow a long dry period or root damage. Check whether the roots are firm before adjusting watering.
- Brown, dry tips: Often caused by prolonged dryness, intense sun after low-light conditions or old leaf ageing.
- Mealybugs: Inspect between offsets and at the base of the rosette, where pests can hide in tight spaces.
Clumping notes for Aristaloe aristata
Offset production is part of the plant’s normal growth. A crowded clump can be kept together for a fuller pot, or divided when the rosettes begin pressing tightly against each other.
Aristaloe aristata safety
Aristaloe aristata should be kept away from pets and children that chew plants. The leaf margins and tips are small but pointed, and ingestion may cause irritation or digestive upset.
Aristaloe aristata name background
The genus name Aristaloe and the species epithet aristata relate to the Latin arista, meaning an awn or bristle, referring to the bristly leaf margins and fine pointed leaf tips. The accepted botanical name is Aristaloe aristata; Aloe aristata is an older synonym.
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