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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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Sonoran Desert Museum, Tucson, Arizona, April 3, 2010. This plant is native to South Africa.
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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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Aloe barberae is a forest tree. Here the coastal forest (south of Catembe, Mozambique) has almost disappeared, but the Aloe trees remain, probably because these have no value as firewood.
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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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Tree-sized Aloe barberae loaded with fruits, on the coast, south of Maputo, Mozambique
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Sonoran Desert Museum, Tucson, Arizona, April 3, 2010. This plant is native to South Africa.
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Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
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The tree-sized Aloe barberae as a component in the dune forest of Inhambane province in Mozambique
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Eastern Cape, South Africa
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Sonoran Desert Museum, Tucson, Arizona. April 3, 2010. This plant is native to South Africa.
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A small specimen of the tree aloe (Aloe barberae) on the southern Mozambique coast at Catembe.
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Dwarf form (2 m.) of Aloe barberae on the coast south of Maputo, Mozambique. I don't believe this dwarfing is genetically determined but a consequence of the harsh environment and perhaps also due to natural propagation by cuttings.