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: A MONOGRAPH (79/90) 40 . Sansevieria fasciata, Cornu ex Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, 1903, pp. 170, 172, 173, fig. 3. STEMLESS, with thick creeping rootstock and crowded leaf-tufts. LEAVES frequently 2 (sometimes 3-5) in a tuft, with the basal half erect and the upper part recurved-spreading or sometimes drooping, coriaceous, but rather flexible, smooth, 1.25-2 3/4 ft. long, 1.5-4.5 in. broad, 1/6 in. thick at the middle of the blade, lanceolate, acute, with a a green point 1-3 lin. long, withering to withish at the tip, tapering from about the middle into a stout concave-channeled petiole, pale green above, whitish-green beneath, very distinctly marked on both sides with irregular narrow zigzag transverse dark green bands; on the upper surface the pale green areas are more or less interrupted or broken up into irregular spots and longitudinally transverse by dark green lines; beneath the colouring is much brighter, with fewer and more distant dark green bands not so much broken up into spots nor transversed by dark green lines; margins at first green, finally very narrowly whitish or reddish, with age sometimes decomposing into very fine fibres. FLOWERS not seen. De Wildem. Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625, fig. 3. Sansevieria lasciata. Gentil, Liste Pl. Cult. Jard. Bot. Brux., 1907, p. 172. Congo Free State. Sent to Paris Botanic Garden from the Congo region by Dybowski in 1891 and by Lecomte in 1894. Described from a portion of the type plant cultivated at Kew, originally received from Paris Botanic Garden in 1903. This species appears to be closely allied to Sansevieria bracteata, Baker; its leaves are very similar in their very pronounced variegation, but the hardened margins is only half as broad as in that species. I think it probable that specimens distributed by A. S. Curtiss, no. 112, under the name of Sansevieria guineensis, Willd., belong to this species; it is stated to be common along roadsides near Nassau, in the Bahamas, where it is introduced. 🌿📷: Sansevieria fasciata.

5/15/2024, 6:01:28 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (78/90) The more recently introduced variety Laurentii is a rather remarkable plant. Not so much on account of its beautifully variegated foliage, but because that variegation is not reproduced in plants raised from leaf-cuttings. At least all efforts made at Kew to propagate the variegation from cuttings of the variegated leaves have resulted in failure, as all the plants so raised have reverted to the typical form, without a trace of the yellow striping. Even plants that have originated directly from the yellow part of a leaf-cutting have no trace of the yellow in them, so that it would appear the power to produce the yellow variegation resides entirely in the rootstock, as cuttings of the latter always reproduce the variegated plant. 🌿📷: Sansevieria trifasciata 'Gold Flame'.

5/14/2024, 4:55:47 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (76/90) 39. Sansevieria trifasciata, Prain. Bengal Plants, vol. ii. p. 1054 (1903) STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock 0.5-1 in. thick. LEAVES often 1-2, but in vigorous plants 2-6 to a growth, smooth, 1-4 ft. long, 1-2 3/4 in. broad, very erect, straight, stiff or firmly coriaceous, linear-lanceolate or narrowly elongated-lanceolate, acute, with a stout green (not hardened) subulate point 1/8-1.5 in. long, gradually narrowing from above or about the middle into a concave-channeled petiole very variable in length, transversely banded on both sides from base to apex with very distinct light dull green or clear whitish-green and deep grass-green to add almost blackish-green, mostly without, but sometimes with narrow cartilaginous edges. FLOWER-STEM 1-2.5 ft. high, 1.5-4 lin. thick, green, dotted with paler green, with 3-4 attenuate acute whitish or very pale brownish membranous sheaths 0.5-2.25 in. long on the basal part and a lax raceme of flower-clusters above. FLOWER-CLUSTERS solitary or in scattered groups of 2-3 from 0.25-1.5 in. apart. BRACTS 1/8-0.5 in. long, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, membranous, spreading. FLOWERS, 3-8 in a cluster, pale greenish or greenish-white; pedicels 2.5-4 lin. long, jointed at or just above the middle, with the persistent part 1-2 lin. long; tube 3-6 lin. long; lobes 7-9 lin. long, linear, obtuse. BERRY globose, about 1/3 in. in diameter, bright orange, 1-seeded, with 2 cells aborted in the specimens seen. Prain in Records of the Botanical Survey of India, vol. iii. p. 287, and Contributions to Indian Botany, p. 339. Sansevieria guineensis, Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, 1903, pp. 172-173, fig. 1; De Wildem. Mission E. Laurent, p. clvi., with fig., and Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625, f. 1, not of p. 629 nor of Willdenow. Sansevieria zebrina, Gentil, Liste Pl. Cult. Jard. Bot. Brux., 1907, p. 172, name only. Sansevieria jacquinii, N. E. Brown in Kew Bulletin, 1911, p. 97. 🌿📷: Type of Sansevieria trifasciata, Prain.

5/14/2024, 4:30:37 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (75/90) Described from dried specimens. The type is stated by Mr. Baker to have been collected by Peterick, but this is an error; it was collected by Dr. J. Murie, formerly assistant secretary to the Linnean Society, but was forwarded to Kew, with others collected by Dr. Murie, by Mr. J. Peterick, when acting as Consul in Central Africa. Sansevieria nilotica var. obscura, N. E. Brown LEAVES, 4-5 to a growth, erect, flexible, smooth, 2-2 3/4 ft. long (including the petiole), 1.52 3/4 in. broad, very narrowly lanceolate or strap-shaped, tapering near the apex into a soft green subulate point 0.5-1.25 in. long and below into a deeply concave-channeled petiole 0.5-1 ft. long, opaque (not at all shining) grass-green, with or without a few inconspicuous transverse bars of slightly paler green 1-1.5 in. apart; margins green. FLOWER-STEM 2-3 ft. long, 2.5-3 lin. long, ovate-lanceolate, acute or acuminate, membranous, spreading. FLOWERS 3-6 in a cluster; pedicels jointed above the middle, with the persistent part dusky or dull purplish, 1 3/4-2.25 lin. long and the deciduous part much paler and greenish, 1-1.25 lin. long; tube 4 lin. long, 1 lin. in diameter at the very slightly enlarged base, dingy greenish-white, marked with 6 longitudinal lines of dull purplish; lobes 7 lin. long, rather more than 1 lin. broad, linear, obtuse, very revolute, whitish, with a purplish stripe on the back of each, very shining. Tropical Africa. Uganda, without precise locality, Dawe! Described from a living plant sent by Mr. M. T. Dawe from Uganda to Kew, where it flowered in June, 1913. This variety may prove to be specifically distinct from S. nilotica, when living plants of both can be compared side by side. Dried specimens of S. nilotica differs in having longer leaves, more gradually tapering at the apex, and are very distinctly marked with rather crowded and very zigzag transverse bars, whilst in the living plant of var. obscura the transverse paler bars are indistinct and distant. 🌿📷: Leaves detail of Sansevieria balthazar.

5/13/2024, 4:53:02 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (74/90) 38. Sansevieria nilotica, Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc., vol. xiv. p. 548. STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock about 3/4 in. thick. LEAVES 2-3 to a growth, smooth, adult forms (including the petiole) 3-4 ft. long, 1-2.25 in. broad, strap-shaped, with the sides for a foot or more of the central part quite parallel, narrowing at the apical part into a soft green subulate point 1/6-2/3 in. long and gradually tapering at the basal point into a deeply concave-channeled petiole 1-2 ft. long, conspicuously marked with very numerous closely placed irregular zigzag transverse narrow bars of dark green and paler green; margins green. FLOWER-STEM 1 3/4-2.25 ft. high, of which 1-1.5 ft. is occupied by a lax raceme of irregularly scattered flower-clusters, and on the lower part are about 5 clasping sheaths, of which the lower are about 3 in. long, and taper into a long subulate point, the upper 2/3-1.25 in. long, narrowly lanceolate, acute, membranous. FLOWERS 4-10 in the lower and 2-3 in the upper clusters; pedicels 3.5-6 lin. long, jointed above the middle, with the persistent part 2-5 lin. long; tube 4.5-5 lin. long; lobes 5.5-6 lin. long, linear, subacute, white. Gürke in Engler, Pfl. Ost-Afr. B, p. 367, t. 5, fig. J; Baker in Fl. Trop. Afr. vol. vii. p. 332. Tropical Africa. Muro or Moru Territory: in woods near the river bank at Wayo, Murie! Mittu territory: at Mvolo, near the Bahr el Rohl, Schweinfurth, (3834)! Ruwenzori, Scott Elliot! 🌿📷: Sansevieria balthazar

5/13/2024, 4:45:35 AM

you are proof of all beauty, sincerity and memories... this haworthia mutated in @abiaja_lah the message given to me, multiply it then you can sell it... Now @abiaja_lah Gone forever...you were the best teacher, older brother and friend I ever had. For all your services and kindness, let me name this Haworthia "Haworthia.H.2612" Hopefully this final tribute will be a lifelong memory for plant lovers.. Rest in peece @abiaja_lah #haworthia #haworthiaH.2612 #H.2612 #plants #sansevierialover #agavelovers #haworthialover

5/12/2024, 5:26:34 PM

I’ve been wanting to have these ‘Kismayo’ variegated and angola for a very long time, finally have them for a very minimal price. Winner winner! I even had a ‘Chanin’ in the set🫶🏾💪🏾 #sansevieriaeveryday #sansevieria #sansevierialover #sansevieriacollection #sansevieriacollector #houseplant #houseplants #gardening #garden #plant #plantdad #LovingSanse #SansevieriaPhilippines #arid #succulent #pottedplants #succulentlover #succulentlove #droughtlovingplant #love #loveplants #plantlover #collection #newcollection

5/12/2024, 1:34:05 PM

サンスベリア ロリダ sansevieria rorida 実験的にLEDで育成中 #サンスベリア #サンセベリア #サンセベリアロリダ #サンスベリアロリダ #サンスベリア好きな人と繋がりたい #サンセベリア好きな人と繋がりたい #sansevieriamania #sansevierialover #sansevieria #sansevieriarorida #succulent #succulentmania #succulentlover #botanical #bizarreplants

5/12/2024, 5:39:17 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (73/90) 37. Sansevieria subtilis, N. E. Brown STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock 4-5 lin. thick. LEAVES 2-4 to a growth, erect or slightly recurving, very flexible, smooth, 1 3/4-2.25 ft. long, 1-1 3/4 in. broad, 1.25 lin. thick at the midrib, linear-lanceolate, gradually tapering from the middle or above upwards into a subulate soft green point 0.5-1 in. long and downwards into a channeled petiole 2-12 in. long, uniformly green and shining on both sides, or here and there a very faint trace of transverse banding on the under surface; margins green, not hardened. FLOWER-STEM 15-21 in. high, rather slender, 2 lin. thick at the base, the lower half bearing about 3-distant membranous acuminate sheaths 5-6 lin. long and the upper a law raceme of flower-clusters. BRACTS membranous, 1.5-2 lin. long, lanceolate, acuminate. FLOWERS 2-3 in each cluster; pedicels 2-3.5 lin. long, articulated at about the middle, with the persistent part 1-2 lin. long and the deciduous part 1-1.5 lin. long; tube 3-4 lin. long, slender, 1 lin. in diameter at the slightly enlarged but not distinctly inflated base; lobes 5-6 lin. long, 3/4 lin. broad, linear, obtuse, white, recurved or somewhat revolute. Tropical Africa. Uganda; without precise locality, Dawe! Described from a living plant sent from Uganda by Mr. M. T. Dawe to Kew. This and Sansevieria nilotica var. obscura were received at the same time, without information, and are so very similar in foliage that they were supposed to belong to one species and were planted together in the same pot. When, however, they both flowered at the same time on June 4th, 1913, it was at once seen that they are certainly quite distinct in their flowers, and after separating the two plants it was noted that they can be distinguished by the foliage of S. subtilis being uniformly green on both sides, whilst S. nilotica var. obscura has indistinct transverse bars and a dull surface to its leaves. 🌿📷: Sansevieria sp. Uganda.

5/12/2024, 4:02:26 AM

サンセベリア バナナ 今の時期は急に冷えたりするんで天気予報見ながら外に出したり、室内に避難扠せたりしてる。サンセベリアに関しては過去の失敗で学んだんでね😅 #サンセベリア #サンセベリアバナナ #サンセベリア好き #サンスベリア #サンスベリアバナナ #サンスベリア好き #sanseveria #sansevierialover #sanseveriamania #sanseveriabanana #succulent #succulentlover #succulentmania #多肉植物

5/11/2024, 4:18:57 PM

: A MONOGRAPH (72/90) FLOWERS 3-6 in a cluster, white, tinged with purple where exposed to the sun; pedicels 2.5-4 lin. long, jointed at or below the middle, with the upper or deciduous part 1 3/4-3 lin. long; tube varying from 0.25-0.5 in. in length on different specimens of the same plant, 2/3-1 lin. in diameter above; lobes 5-9 lin. long, linear, obtuse, revolute. Baker in Fl. Trop. Afr., vol. vii. p. 332. Sansevieria cornui, Gér and Labr. in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris, 1903, p. 170,173, fig. 5; De Wildem. Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625, fig. 5 Senegambia. Richardtol, Richard, (72)! and without precise locality, Perrottet, (782)! and (76) ex Baker, also cultivated specimens! Described from a living plant, a portion of the type of S. cornui, received from Paris Botanic Garden in 1903, which first flowered at Kew in 1905. S. cornui is absolutely identical with the type of S. senegambica, Baker. 🌿📷: Sansevieria humiflora (R 0889) with chimeral variegation.

5/11/2024, 6:05:04 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (71/90) 36. Sansevieria senegambica, Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc., vol. xiv. p. 548 STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock 0.5-3/4 in. thick, bright red, changing to very pale brownish where exposed to the light. LEAVES 3-4 to a growth, coriaceous, smooth, 1-2.5 ft. long, 1 1/6-2.5 in. broad, 1-2.5 lin. thick at the middle, suberect at the basal third or half, then recurved-spreading, linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, gradually tapering from the middle upwards into an acute subulate soft green point 1/6-0.5 in. long, and downwards into a stout, flattened concave-channeled petiole 1-3 in. long, or, in juvenile forms, scarcely petiolate, concave to almost flat, scarcely or not at all wavy; upper surface entirely dark green or somewhat indistinctly marked with transverse bars of paler green, under surface slightly paler than the upper, with transverse bars much more distinct, but often becoming nearly obliterated with age; margins green, like the rest of the leaf, not becoming whitish or reddish. FLOWER-STEM 12-20 in. high, 2-2.5 lin. thick at the base, light or dark green or mottled with purplish, according to intensity of light, not glaucous; the lower half with 4-5 distant sheaths, of which the lower are 1.25-2.5 in. long, stem-clasping at the base with a long slender awl-like free point, and the upper 1/3-1 in. long, ovate, acute, stem-clasping, white or tinted with reddish-brown; upper half with a spike-like lax racemes of flower-clusters, which sometimes are grouped 2-3 together. BRACTS spreading, 3-4 lin. long, 1-1.5 lin. broad, ovate-lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, acute, membranous, white. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria humiflora (R 0889)

5/11/2024, 5:56:35 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (70/90) 35. Sansevieria subspicata, Baker in Gard. Chron. 1889, vol. vi. p. 436. STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock, 0.5-1 in. thick, pale yellowish brown. LEAVES, 4-8 (up to 10 ex Baker) in a tuft, coriaceous, rather flexible, or somewhat firm, erect or recurved-spreading, smooth, 3/4-2 ft. long, 1-2.25 in. broad, 1 lin. or less thick at the middle of the blade, lanceolate or narrowly lanceolate, acute, with subulate soft green (withering to white) point 1/6-0.25 in. long, mostly tapering from the middle or above into a comparatively slender petiole 1.5-9 in. long and 2-3 lin. broad and thick and concave-channeled down the face; deep green, slightly shining, sometimes very faintly glaucous with age; when young sometimes obscurely marked with transverse paler green bars, which soon disappear; edges of young leaves green, of old ones (apparently from rubbing or damage) very narrowly whitish. FLOWER-STEM 12-16 in. high, 1/6-0.25 in. long on the basal half, and a spike-like racemes above. BRACTS 1-3 lin. long, lanceolate, acute, membranous. FLOWERS solitary or in pairs, white; pedicels 0.5-1 lin. long, articulated close under the base of the flower, with no deciduous part; tube 11-14 lin. long, greenish-white; lobes 2/3-3/4 in. long, linear, obtuse, revolute. Baker in Flora Capensis, vol. vi. p. 5 South Africa. Delagoa Bay (cultivated specimens), Mrs. Monteiro! Described from the type plant, still in cultivation at Kew, originally sent from Delagoa Bay by Mrs. Monteiro in 1866. 🌿📷: Sansevieria subspicata with chimeral variegation.

5/10/2024, 3:58:13 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (69/90) 34. Sansevieria concinna, N. E. Brown STEMLESS. ROOTSTOCK creeping, about 0.5 in. thick. LEAVES, about 5 to a growth, ascending-spreading and slightly recurving, coriaceous, smooth, 6-10 in. long, 0.5-1.25 in. broad, narrowly lanceolate, acute, with a green subulate point 2-4 lin. long, shortly narrowing at the base into a channeled petiole 1.5-3.5 in. long and 2-3 lin. broad; blade apparently somewhat folded longitudinally, with the margins green and scarcely hardened, apparently transversely banded on both sides with pale green and bands much broader on the upper surface than on the lower, but on dried specimens often entirely obliterated on both sides. FLOWER-STEM 0.5-1 ft. high, with a compact raceme of flowers on the upper half and 4 lanceolate acuminate sheaths 1-1.25 in. long on the lower half, apparently tinged and dotted with purple. BRACTS spreading 0.25-1/3 in. long, lanceolate, acuminate, membranous. FLOWERS in pairs or a few of them solitary; pedicels jointed close under the flower, with the persistent part 1.5-2 lin. long; tube 1 3/4 in. long, about 1 lin. in diameter, cylindric, swollen at the base; lobes 10 lin. long, linear, 1 lin. broad near the apex, slightly tapering to the base, white. Portuguese East Africa. Near Beira, Dawe, (1)! 🌿📷: Sansevieria concinna (Lav 5933) with chimeral variegation.

5/9/2024, 4:52:00 AM

Sansevieria hybrid... А вот какой я точно не уверена. Может быть это Buntheing или Banterng, а может это одно и тоже 😄 #сансевиерия #сансивиерия #сансевьерия #санса #sansevieria #sansevierialover #sansevieracollection #sansevierias #sansevierialove #sansevieriahybrid

5/8/2024, 11:27:52 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (68/90) 33. Sansevieria parva, N. E. Brown ROOTSTOCK creeping, 1/3 in. thick, brownish-orange. STEM usually evident and often rising 1-5 in. above the ground, sometimes concealed by the leaf-bases. LEAVES 6-14 to a growth, the inner ascending or suberect and slightly recurved-spreading at the upper part, smooth, 8-18 in. long, 4-7 lin. broad, the outer gradually shorter, more spreading and up to 14 lin. broad, all subfleshy or firmly coriaceous, not very flexible, linear or linear-lanceolate to lanceolate, concave or deeply channeled down the face or folded longitudinally, rounded or obtusely keeled on the back, tapering at the apex into a stout subulate soft green point, mostly 1.5-3 in. long, narrowed into a petiole up to 2 in. long, flat on the face and very rounded on the back, or sometimes only broadly clasping at the base, the younger marked on both sides with very distinct irregular transverse bands of dark bright green and paler green, becoming with age of a nearly uniform green or the markings very obscure; margins green, not hardened nor reddish. FLOWER-STEM about 1 ft. high, scarcely 1/8 in. thick at the base, smooth, light green, bearing a lax raceme of flower-clusters at the upper third, and on the lower two-thirds 3 membranous distant clasping sheaths 0.5-1 in. long, tapering to a finely pointed apex. BRACTS spreading, membranous, 1/8-1/6 in. long, narrowly lanceolate, acute. FLOWERS in pairs or the upper solitary, ascending; pedicels 2-2.5 lin. long, jointed above the middle, the upper or deciduous part being thickened upwards; tube 5-5.5 lin. long, 3/4 lin. in diameter, swollen at the base, pale pinkish-white; lobes 4-4.5 lin. long, linear obtuse, more or less tinted with mauve whitin, dull mauve or purplish on the back. British East Africa. Near the Gilgil River, scarce, Powell (15). Uganda: Semliki Valley, Dawe, (687). Described from living plants sent by Mr. H. Powell in 1906 to Kew, where it flowered in January, 1910. The flowers open in the morning and close between 1 and 2 p.m. 🌿📷: Sansevieria parva with offshoots.

5/8/2024, 4:20:03 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (67/90) 32. Sansevieria dooneri, N. E. Brown ROOTSTOCK creeping, 0.25-1/3 in. thick, orange-brown, or, when above ground, dull olive-green, with broad whitish sheathing scales about 0.5 in. long. STEM, none on some growths, but sometimes up to 2 in. high, concealed by the leaf-bases, and not very evident. LEAVES on the barren growths up to 20, crowded on the short stem; on the flowering growths 6-8 in lax rosette, coriaceous, flexible, very recurved-spreading from an erect or ascending basal part, very smooth, 4-17 in. long, 2/3-1 1/6 in. broad; strap-shaped or narrowly lanceolate, gradually narrowing downwards from near or above the middle to a scarcely petiolate base and more rapidly tapering upwards into a stout soft subulate green point 0.25-2 in. long, flattish or but slightly concave down the face, dark green, slightly paler green bands on both sides; margins green, not hardened. FLOWER-STEM 1-1.25 ft. high, green, with a lax racemes of flower-clusters at the upper half, and on the lower part 4 membranous clasping sheaths 0.5-3/4 in. long, tapering to an acute point. BRACTS membranous, 1-2 lin. long, ovate-lanceolate, acute. FLOWERS 3, or near the top 2 in a cluster, ascending-spreading; dull pink or pale purplish outside, whitish within; pedicels 1.5-2 lin. long, jointed to the shortly obconical base of the flower; tube about 5.5 lin. long; lobes 5.5-6 lin. long, linear, sub-obtuse. British East Africa. Rift Valley, near the Kedong River, Dooner! Described from living plants collected by Mr. H. B. Dooner and sent by Mr. W. G. Freeman in Aug., 1907, to Kew, where they flowered in March and May, 1910. This is very similar to Sansevieria parva, but when both species are seen growing side by side S. dooneri can at once be distinguished by its less evident stem and less erect habit, the leaves being much more recurved; they have no very distinct petiole, and their subulate points are usually much shorter; also the colour is a much darker and duller green, with very inconspicuous paler markings. In S. parva the green is rather bright and the paler bars quite conspicuous on the younger leaves. 🌿📷: Variegated Sansevieria dooneri.

5/7/2024, 4:06:17 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (66/90) 31. Sansevieria grandiscuspis, Haw. Synop. Pl. Succ. 67. STEMLESS, with stout creeping rootstock. LEAVES 5-15 in a tuft, erect, sub-erect or ascending-spreading, nearly straight, smooth, 7-20 in. long, 0.5-1.5 in. broad, 1/10-1/8 in. thick at the middle, coriaceous, stiff, linear-lanceolate, with very open angular or concave channel down the face or strap-shaped and flat or nearly so, shortly tapering or somewhat abruptly narrowed into a stout subulate somewhat flexible (not at all hardened) green point 2/3-2 in. long, the broader and flatter leaves narrowed at the base but scarcely petiolate, and the narrower gradually tapering into a deeply channeled petiole 2-6 in. long, so that the distinction between blade and petiole is lost, somewhat regularly marked with transverse bars of dull dark and lighter green on both sides to the apex, with 5-7 longitudinal continuous or interrupted darker green impressed lines or slight furrows on the back; margins green, sometimes with age or injury becoming very narrowly whitish. FLOWERS not seen. Sprengel, Syst. Veg., vol. ii. p. 93; Schultes, Syst. Veg., vol. vii. p. 359; Kunth, Enum. Pl. vol. v. p. 20; Baker in Fl. Trop. Afr., vol. vii. p. 336; Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., 1903, pp. 172-173, fig. 13; De Wildem. Notices Pl. Utiles do Congo, pp. 624-625, fig. 13; Sansevieria ensifolia, Haw. Synop. Pl. Succ., p. 66; Kunth, Enum. Pl., vol. v. p. 20. Sansevieria pupils, Haw. Synop. Pl. Succ., p. 67; Link. Enum. Hort. Berol., vol. i. p. 342; Schultes, Syst. Veg., vol. vii. p. 359; Kunth, Enum. Pl., vol. v. p. 20. Origin Unknown. Described from living plants that have long been in cultivation. Haworth originally described it in 1812 from a living plant, and S. pupils which he described at the same time, is evidently only the juvenile state of S. grandiscuspis. Sansevieria pumila, De Spin., appears to have been quite different plant. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria 'Koko Crater'.

5/6/2024, 4:35:10 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (65/90) Thunb. Nov. Gen. 127, and Fl. Cap. ed. Schultes, p. 329; Schultes, Syst. Veg., vol. vii. p. 358; Kunth Enumerated. Pl., vol. v. p. 19; N. E. Brown in Bot. Mag. t. 8487. Sansevieria zeylanica, Redoute Lil. vol. v. t. 290; Ait. Hort. Kew ed. 2, vol. ii. p. 278; Lindl. Bot. Reg. vol. ii. t. 160; Kunth, Enum. Pl., vol. v. p. 18; Baker in Kew Bull., 1887, No. v. p. 3 and 8, fig. 5, not of p. 4; Hooker, Fl. Brit. India, vol. vi. p. 270; and Baker Fl. Cap., vol. vi. p. 5, not of Willdenow, excluding all synonyms except those quoted here. Sansevieria glauca, Gèrôme and Labr. in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., 1903, pp. 169, 172-173, fig. 11, and De wildem. Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625, fig. 11, not of Haworth. Aletris zeylanica, Mill Dict. ed. 8, no. iv. not of Lamarck. A. hyacinthoides var. zeylanica, Ait. Hort. Kew, ed. 1, vol. i. p. 464. Tropical Africa. Rhodesia, near Buluwayo, Mrs. Evelyn Cecil. (103)! Southern Rhodesia, Allen, (654)! South Africa, Griqualand West, Lower Campbell, Nutshell (1824)! Transvaal, Shiluvane, Junod (1212)! South African Goldfields, Baines! Warmbath, Miss Leendertz (2354)! Graaf Reinet Div. near Graaf Reinet, Bolus (720)! Uitenhage Div. Uitenhage, Burchell (4420)! Sandfontein, Burke! Alexandria Div. Zuurberg Range, Cooper (3267)! Albany Div. Cooper (3268)! According to Mr. Baines, in a note upon a drawing at Kew, the Bushmen and Bechuanas make their cord from the fibre of this plant. Described from living plants cultivated at Kew. 🌿📷: Sansevieria aethiopica with berries.

5/5/2024, 3:35:23 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (64/90) 30. Sansevieria aethiopica, Thunb. Prodr. Fl. Cap., p. 65 STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock. LEAVES 13-30 to a growth, not 2-ranked, ascending-spreading, somewhat rough, 5-17 in. long, 5-7 lin. broad, about 1 3/4-2 3/4 lin. thick at the middle, linear or linear-lanceolate, sessile or only slightly narrowed to the base, gradually tapering from the middle to a subulate point 3/4-1 1/6 in. long, which when young, is green, but very soon whiters to white, very concave down the face, dark green with a somewhat bluish hue and more or less glaucous, sometimes transversely banded with paler green; margins red or whitish (drying red). FLOWER-STEM 16-30 in. high, 3.5-5 lin. thick at the base, with 5-7 whitish membranous sheaths 3/4-2 3/4 in. long on the lower half. BRACTS spreading or reflexed, 2.5-5 lin. long, ovate-lanceolate, acute. FLOWERS 4-6 in a cluster; pedicels 2-4 lin. long, jointed above the middle; tube 3/4-1 in. long; lobes 7-9 lin. long, white. 🌿📷: Sansevieria aethiopica inflorescence.

5/5/2024, 3:27:21 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (63/90) Upper Burma. Near Kyaukse, Abdul Huk! In the scrub forest around the village of Partar, two miles south-east of the town of Kyaukse, H. Clayton! Pyogingon, Aubert and Gage! Described from living plants, dried flowers and a photograph sent to Kew by Mr. H. Clayton, Director of Agriculture, Burma, in September, 1912. It is nearly allied to S. roxburghiana and S. zeylanica, but when alive the adult plant is readily distinguished from S. zeylanica by its much thinner and more flexible leaves, which are erect and straight, not recurving, with more numerous lines on the back at the middle part, as well as by the lighter green colour and less shining surface. From S. roxburghiana it is easily distinguished in both the living and dried states by its much more erect and very straight leaves, which are also usually longer and more uniform in width for a greater part of their length. 🌿📷: Leaves detail of variegated Sansevieria javanica.

5/4/2024, 3:54:03 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (62/90) 29. Sansevieria burmanica, N. E. Brown STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock 0.5-2/3 in. thick. LEAVES of adult plants 8-13 to a growth, smooth, 1.5-2.5 ft. long, 0.5-1.25 in. broad, 1.5-2 lin. thick, very erect, straight and all close together, flexible, linear or linear-lanceolate, flattish or with a slight broad angular channel down the face, obtusely keeled on the back, tapering to a soft green subulate point 1-3.5 in. long at the apex, sessile and sheathing at the base, grass-green, transversely banded with paler green, with 6-9 slightly impressed lines down the back and 1-3 on the face; margins green, with age becoming very narrowly whitish, not or scarcely shining. FLOWER STEM 2-2.5 ft. high, with about 3 sub-membranous whitish sheaths 0.5-1.5 in. long on the basal third and a lax racemes of flower-clusters above. Bracts 1-2 lin. long, lanceolate, acute, membranous. FLOWERS 2-5 in a cluster; pedicels 3.5-4 lin. long, jointed at the middle; tube about 4 lin. long, greenish-white. Sansevieria roxburghiana, Hook f. in Bot. Mag. t. 7487, not of Schultes. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria javanica, Blume. with chimeral variegation.

5/4/2024, 3:46:28 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (61/90) India. Coast of Coromandel, Roxburgh; Madras (Triplicane), collector not stated! Goghat, in the Hoogli district, Hossian! Lower Bengal, at Ulubaria, Kurz! Palandu Tea Estate in Chota Nagpur, Cooke! Peninsula, Rottler! and cultivated specimens! Described from living plants cultivated at Kew. The plant here described is unquestionably identical with that figured on t. 184 of Roxburgh's Plants of the Coast of Coromandel, but it does not agree with the description which Roxburgh has given, for in that description he has evidently mixed with it another plant I think will probably prove to be Sansevieria lanuginosa, Willd., since he states that the leaves are 1-4 ft. long and semicylindric. Now Roxburgh's figure is an excellent one of the plant here described, but none of the adult flowering specimens of it that I have seen, either of those grown in India or of those cultivated at Kew, have leaves more than 2 ft. long, usually they are very much less, and none of them are semi-cylindric, the adult form being only crescent-shaped in transverse section. As Roxburgh's description has been more or less embodied in those of subsequent authors, this is the first to be published that is based on the plant alone. Hitherto S. roxburghiana has been more or less confused with S. zeylanica, but when seen growing side by side of that species, it can easily be discriminated, for its leaves are mostly shorter, much thinner and consequently less rigid than those of S. zeylanica, also of a rather lighter and different tint of green, with more numerous longitudinal dark green lines on the back. Possibly the flowers may also differ, but I have not seen those of S. zeylanica. The plant figured as S. roxburghiana in the Botanical Magazine at t. 7484 is Sansevieria burmanica, which does not in the region where S. roxburghiana grows. 🌿📷: Leaves detail of Sansevieria 'Lady Gaga'.

5/3/2024, 4:18:01 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (60/90) 28. Sansevieria roxburghiana, Schultes in Syst. Veg. vol. vii. p. 357 STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock. LEAVES 6-24 to a growth, not 2-ranked, those of juvenile plants and sometimes the outer of the tuft spreading, smooth above, slightly rough beneath, 4-8 in. long, 1-1.5 in. broad, flat, strap-shaped or narrowly lanceolate, usually abruptly rounded into a stout subulate point 0.25-1 in. long; inner or adult leaves ascending and slightly recurving, somewhat stiff, mostly more than 1 ft., but varying from 2/3-2 ft. long 0.5-1 in. broad, 1.5-2 lin. thick, linear, deeply concave-channeled down the face, rounded or very obtusely keeled on the back, gradually tapering into a stout subulate soft point 0.25-2 in. long, green, transversely marked with darker green rather regular bars on both sides and with 6-11 longitudinal dark green lines on scarcely paler under-surface and often 1-3 on the upper; edges green, with age becoming very narrowly whitish. FLOWER-STEM 1-2.5 ft. high, with 4-5 erect acuminate sheaths 1-1.5 ft. long of flower-clusters above; bracts 1.5-2 lin. long, lanceolate-attenuate, membranous. FLOWERS about four in a cluster, pedicels 2.5-4 lin. long, jointed near the middle, with the persistent part 1.5-2 lin. long; tube 3-3.5 lin. long; lobes 4-4.5 lin. long, linear, obtuse; Kunth, Enum. Pl. vol. v. p. 18; Voigt, Hort. Suburb. Calcutt. p. 656; Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc. vol. xiv. p. 549; Hooker, Fl. Brit. Ind., vol. vi. p. 271; Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., 1903, pp. 172-173, fig. 12; De Wildeman, Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625, fig. 12, and p. 631; S. zeylanica, Roxb. Pl. Corom., vol. ii. p. 161, partly; Baker in Kew Bulletin, May, 1887, as to figure on p. 4 only, not as to the description; Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Hist. Nat. 1903, pp. 172-173, fig. 10; De Wildeman, Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 624-625. fig. 10, not of p. 631; Murva, Asiatick Researches. vol. iv. p. 271. 🌿📷: Sansevieria 'Lady Gaga'.

5/3/2024, 4:10:45 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (59/90) Ceylon. Common in Rocky or sandy places in the dry region, according to Trimen. Wild specimens were specially collected by Dr. J. C. Willis and sent alive to Kew for the purpose of this monograph in 1912. The native name for this plant in Ceylon is Niyanda. It is remarkable that, although this species was one of the earliest to be described, yet it is one of the least known, or rather is practically an unknown plant to science, since in all modern descriptions, it is inextricably mixed up with the Indian Sansevieria roxburghiana and Sansevieria lanuginosa, and the South African Sansevieria aethiopica. The confusion was began by Willdenow himself, who mixed up two other species with this; but as the name and description clearly point to the Ceylon plant as here understood and not to either of South African included under it by Willdenow, I think the specific name zeylanica should be exclusively applied to the Ceylon plant, which, with the exception of the living plants now at Kew, from which the above description has been made, does not appear to be anywhere in cultivation out of Ceylon, not have I seen in any British or foreign Herbarium good dried specimens that I should unhesitatingly refer to the true Ceylonese plant. Such as I have examined bearing the name of S. zeylanica, belong either to S. roxburghiana, S. aethiopica, or some other totally different species and are often from cultivated specimens, in no single instance have I seen a localised dried specimen from Ceylon. The description of S. zeylanica given in the Kew Bulletin for May, 1887, p. 8, belongs to S. aethiopica, and figure on p. 4 to S. roxburghiana, whilst the account of the fibre obtained from plants grown in India, Mauritius and Jamaica probably refer to those or some other species and not to the true Ceylon plant. 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria zeylanica.

5/2/2024, 2:58:38 AM

Good morning Thursday @ have a good day #sansevieriasilverblue #sansevierialover #sansevieriathailand #sansevieria

5/2/2024, 2:57:55 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (58/90) 27. Sansevieria zeylanica, Willd. Sp. Pl. vol. ii. p. 159, excluding all synonyms not quoted here. STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock 0.5 in. thick. LEAVES of adult plant 5-11 to a growth, erect at the lower part and slightly recurving above, nearly smooth, slightly shining, 1.5-2.5 ft. long, 4-10 lin. broad, 2.5-4 lin. thick, measured from the bottom of the channel to the back; linear-semiterete, concave-channeled down the face, very rounded on the back, gradually tapering from the base to a very acute soft subulate green point 0.5-1.5 in. long, which withers to whitish, very dark green, transversely banded throughout with rather lighter green, and with 4-7 darker green longitudinal lines on the back, which on withered leaves become slight furrows; margins green. FLOWERS not seen. Willd. Enum. Pl. Hort. Berol., p. 375? (this may have been S. aethiopica); Haw. Synop. Pl. Succ. 66; Link, Enum. Pl. Hort. Berol. vol. i. p. 342; Sprengel, Syst. Veg. vol. ii. p. 94; Schultes, Syst. Veg. vol. vii. p. 357; Trimen, Handb. Fl. Ceylon vol. iv. p. 267, partly (excluding from the above references all synonyms not quoted here). Aloe zeylanica pumila foliis variegatis, Pluk. Almagest. Bot. p. 17, t. 256, fig. 5; and Commelin Hort. Med. Amstelodam, Rar. Pl. vol. ii. p. 41, t. 21. Aloe hyacinthoides var. zeylanica, Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. ii. p. 456, and Mantissa ii. p. 367. Aletris zeylanica, Lam. Encycl. vol. i. p. 79, not of Miller. 🌿📷: Leaves of Sansevieria zeylanica.

5/2/2024, 2:49:17 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (57/90) 26. Sansevieria volkensii, Gurke in Engl. Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afr. C. 144. STEMLESS, with a creeping rootstock. LEAVES semiterete, channeled on the face, rounded on the back, rigid, gradually tapering to a sharply pointed apex; green, sometimes marked with transverse bands formed of whitish spots. FLOWER-STEM shorter than or as long as the leaves. FLOWERS white. Baker in Fl. Trop. Afr. vol. vii. p. 334. German East Africa. Kilimanjaro; at Rombo, Holst, (4080). Crater-edge of Lake Chala Volcano, 3700 ft., Volkens, (1779). 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria volkensii.

5/1/2024, 3:45:37 AM

OMG, my #sansevieriasamurai is finally growing a new leaf 🥳. I was about to start calling it my green pet rock, but I guess there is some life left in it after all. This plant has been with me since 2019, and ever since then I think it has grown one leaf 🙈. That one is not looking its best either, as you can probably tell 😅. A couple of days ago I noticed that it had started growing a new leaf. Hopefully it will turn out better than the last one. But by the rate this plant is growing, you'll find out about that new leaf at the end of the year or maybe even next year 😂. All joking aside, I do love the structure of the plant and the spiky leaves 💚. But it'll deffinitly test your patience 🙏. What is your slowest growing plant 🌿? Have a happy #tuesday 🫶. . . . . . #sansevieria #sansevierialovers #sansevieriacollection #sansevierialover #dracena #succulentplant #samurai #slowgrowing #petrock #spikyleaves #plantsmakepeoplehappy #plantsofinstagram #plantsplantsplants #plantlady #plantmom #plantlife #plantlove #indoorjunglebloggers #indoorjungleparent #indoorjungle #urbanjunglehome #urbanjungle

4/30/2024, 5:16:52 PM

: A MONOGRAPH (56/90) 25. Sansevieria lanuginosa, Willd. Sp. Pl. vol. ii p. 160. STEMLESS. ROOTSTOCK creeping, stout, with reddish skin. LEAVES about 3-4 to a growth, 1.5-3 ft. long and apparently about 8-9 lin. broad and 3 lin. thick, rigidly erect, concavely semiterete, thick and fleshy, with a concave channel nearly or quite as broad as the leaf down the face and with several grooves down the back and sides, shortly sheathing at the base, tapering at the upper part to an acute point; green, with "woolly" veins (grooves). FLOWER-STEM about 2 ft. high, with 2-3 small ovate acute sheaths on the lower part and a racemes of flower-clusters at the upper part. BRACTS neither described nor figured. FLOWERS 2-3 (according to description, but according to the figure 2-5) in a cluster; pedicels about 2 lin. long; tube (according to the figure) 4-5 lin. long, slightly inflated at the base; lobes 6-7 lin. long, white. BERRIES globose, or of 2-3 globose lobes, 1-3 seeded, pale green (ex Rhede, but perhaps immature.) Sprengel, syst. Veg. vol. ii. p. 93; Schultes, Syst. Veg. vol. vii. p. 358; Kunth, Enum. Pl. vol. v. p. 19; Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc. vol. xiv. p. 549. Aletris zeylanica var. B, Lam. Encycl. vol. i. p. 79. Salmia ebracteata, Cavanill. Ic. vol. iii. p. 24, under Sansevieria spicata. Katu Kapel seu Cadenaco, Rhede Hort. Malabar. vol. I. p. 83, t. 42. India. Malabar, in sandy places, Rhede. Unknown to me. Described from Rhede's figure and description. It appears to be similar to Sansevieria zeylanica, Willd., but if the statement that the grooves on the leaves are woolly is correct, then it is perfectly distinct from all known species in the genus; but no indication of any woolliness is represented in the figure, and I very much doubt the accuracy of the statement. I suspect that this is the plant which Roxburgh has chiefly described in his Pl. of the Coast of Coromandel, vol. ii. p. 43, and in Fl. Ind. vol. ii. p. 161, as S. zeylanica, but it is certainly not the plant he has figured under that name, for which see Sansevieria roxburghiana. 🌿📷: Sansevieria 'Cordova'.

4/30/2024, 3:37:15 AM

Sanseveria "Snowflake" #sansevierialover #sanseveriamania #sanseveria #sanseveriasnowflake #サンスベリアスノーフレーク #サンスベリア好きな人と繋がりたい #サンスベリア #サンセベリア #サンセベリア好きな人と繋がりたい #サンセベリアスノーフレーク #タイ産サンセベリア #タイ産サンスベリア #thailandsanseveria #succulent #succulentlover #succulentmania

4/28/2024, 6:34:17 PM

: A MONOGRAPH (52/90) 23. Sansevieria sulcata, Bojer ex Baker in Journ. Linn, Soc., vol. xiv., p. 549, under S. cylindrica, Bojer. ROOTSTOCK creeping, 2/3-1 in. thick, reddish. LEAVES apparently solitary; in one specimen seen the leaf arises from the apex of a piece of rhizome 5 in. long, surrounded at its base by 3-4 broadly ovate rather thin scale-leaves 1-3.5 in. broad; the other two leaves seen are detached, erect, smooth, 1.5-2 ft. long, 2/5-3/4 in. thick in dried specimens, probably much stouter when alive, cylindric, with 8-9 broadly-rounded ribs, separated by shallow furrows (scarcely or not discernible in dried specimens, except after boiling a very thin section in water), tapering near the apex to a hardened abruptly acute pale brown point about 1/8 in. long. FLOWER-STEM 5-9 in. high, stout, 1/8-1/5 in. thick when dried, with 2-3 distant ovate sheaths or scales 1/3-0.5 in. long on the basal half and a raceme of numerous flower-clusters at the upper half. BRACTS 1/10-1/8 in. long, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, acute, membranous, spreading or deflexed. FLOWERS 3-6 in a cluster; pedicels 1-1.5 lin. long; jointed above the middle, with the persistent part 3/4-1 lin. long; tube 3/4 in., or rather more long, slender, in dried flowers (after boiling in water) 0.5 lin. in diameter at the middle, slightly swollen and 5-ribbed at the base; lobes 7 lin. long, linear. 🌿📷: Sansevieria sulcata with offshoots.

4/28/2024, 3:14:31 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (51/90) 22. Sansevieria singularis, N. E. Brown. in Kew Bulletin, 1911, p. 97. STEMLESS. ROOTSTOCK creeping, up to 1 3/4 in. thick. LEAVES solitary, erect, rigid, slightly rough, 1.5-8 in. long, 3/4-1 3/4 in. thick at the base, cylindric, slightly tapering upwards until near the apex, which shortly narrows to a stout acute whitish point, when young, with one concave channel 1.5-3 lin. broad and 1-1.5 lin. deep down the face and 4-6 longitudinal impressed lines on the sides and back, which deepen into furrows with age, dull greyish or bluish-green, often with a brownish tint or perhaps entirely brownish when mature, slightly subglaucous, rather brighter when young and then marked with numerous closely-placed transverse pale green bands, which nearly or quite disappear with age. FLOWERS unknown. British East Africa. Rather common at Voi, growing in large clumps, Powell, (2)! scarce at Mwatate, Powell, (10)! by the river at mile 150-200 Tomson! Described from living plants cultivated at Kew. In a letter dated Dec. 5, 1905, accompanied with a sketch, Mr. H. B. Dooner states that this plant grows in a more or less sandy soil amongst thick scrubs, and does not thrive in the open country; it never grows in swampy ground, and prefers a dry, fairly warm climate. This species is nearly allied to Sansevieria stuckyi, but may readily be distinguished from that by the channel down the face of the leaves being only 1.5-3 lin. broad, by the old leaves having well-marked furrows on the side and back, which are nearly as large as the channel down the face and much more evident than any I have seen on the old leaves of S. stuckyi, also the greyish-green or brownish colour is quite distinct from the green of the leaves of S. stuckyi. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria singularis.

4/27/2024, 3:47:54 AM

copper tone black สีเริ่มเข้าที่เข้าทางแล้ว ที่เหลือก่ะทำจำนวน #sansevieria #sansevierialover

4/26/2024, 4:03:44 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (50/90) With regard to S. andradae, I believe there is no difference whatever between it and S. stuckyi, the outlines of sections of leaves of the two supposed species given by Godefroy-Lebeuf are evidently very crude and inaccurate. All the difference they show in diameter, number of grooves, and form of the channel can, in many species, often be found in different leaves taken from the same growth. I have no hesitation whatever in considering them to belong to the same species. Gérôme and Labroy, when writing their account of Sansevieria, asked Mr. Godefroy-Lebeuf for information concerning S. stuckyi and S. andradae, and according to their statements in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., Paris, vol. ix, pp. 171, 175, they received from Mr. Godefroy-Lebeuf a portion of a leaf of S. stuckyi, with the statement that it came from the region of Bena, and a piece of the rootstock of S. andradae, without roots, buds or shoots, said to be from the region of Enhambara. The piece of leaf of S. stuckyi, agreed with the larger sectional figure given Godefroy-Lebeuf, and together with the piece of rootstock of S. andradae, we're sent to be propagated in the Jardin des Plantes. From them young plants were raised, one of which, raised from the leaf of S. stuckyi, was sent to Kew, from which the juvenile state is above described. Plant raised from the rootstock of S. andradae I have not seen. In 1910 Mr. J. Medley Wood sent a living plant from Durban Botanic Garden, Natal, to Kew of what is evidently the adult state of S. stuckyi, and exactly agreeing with the Boror plant figured by De Wildeman on t. 32 of the work above quoted. Mr. Wood informs me that the plant was sent to him in 1892 from Zanzibar by Dr. Murray, who was then residing there, with the information that the plant was one that had been discovered by Sir John Kirk, and it has never flowered during the 18 years it has been in cultivation at Durban. De Wildeman (Pl. Utiles de la Flore du Congo, p. 623) states that S. stuckyi and S. andradae are natives of Abyssinia and Somaliland, but I can find no evidence of this being their native country. 🌿📷: Mature Sansevieria stuckyi with chimeral variegation.

4/26/2024, 3:43:35 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (49/90) Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. 1903, pp. 171-173, fig. 14; De Wildeman, Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 623, 624, 625, fig. 14, and 632, with fig. and t. 31-32 (not t. 30). Sansevieria andradae Godefroy-Lebeuf, Les Sansevierias Gigantesques de l'Afr. Orient, pp. 17 and 33, with fig. of leaf-section. Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. 1903, pp. 171-173, fig. 15; De Wildeman, Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, pp. 623, 624, 625 (fig. 15), and 633 with fig. Sansevieria species, Journ. d'Agrie. Trop. 1901, p. 64. Portuguese East Africa. Bena and Enhambara, according to Godefroy-Lebeuf, and Boror, according to De Wildeman. Described from living plants, one of which is derived from the type. In the original place of publication only a very vague account of S. stuckyi and S. andradae is given; beyond stating that they come from Eastern Africa, there is no indication of their native country, and practically no description of either. Both are stated to have cylindric leaves 6 ft. and more long, chiefly differing in the number of slight grooves on the sides and back. These grooves, however, are not specific characters, they vary with the age of the leaf in many species; when young, none or few may be present, but as the leaf grows older slight shrinkage along certain lines takes place and more and more grooves are formed. I very much doubt if the two illustrations of S. stuckyi given by Godefroy-Lebeuf (and repeated by De Wildeman) represent the same plant, that of the frontispiece (repeated by De Wildeman at t. 30) is evidently a plant with 8-12 leaves to a growth in two ranks, whilst that on the back of the cover (repeated by De Wildeman at t. 31) appears to me to represent about three growth, with 1-3 leaves to a growth and irregularly placed, not strictly 2-ranked. This latter agrees in habit with the plant I understand as S. stuckyi, and with the Boror plant figured by De Wildeman in Pl. Utiles de la Flore du Congo, t. 32, but it never has nearly so many leaves to a growth nor so decidedly 2-ranked as represented on the plant of the frontispiece. 🌿📷: Leaves of mature Sansevieria stuckyi.

4/26/2024, 3:35:43 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (48/90) 21. Sansevieria stuckyi, Godefroy-Lebeuf, Les Sansevierias Gigantesques de l'Afr. Orient, pp. 13,17 & 33 with fig., also fig. of habit as frontispiece and on the outside cover. STEMLESS, with a stout creeping rootstock up to 2 in. thick. SEEDLING PLANTS with a rosette of 4-6 leaves, spreading and recurved, thick and rigid, 4-6 in. long, 3/4-1.25 in. broad, 1/8-1/3 in. thick, somewhat strap-shaped or narrowly oblong-lanceolate, acute, broadly channeled down the face, very rounded on the back, with more or less wavy hardened reddish-brown acute edges, dark green marked with narrow closely placed subparallel transverse bands of pale green. These leaves are succeeded by others that are ascending or sub-erect, rigid, 1.5-2.25 ft. long, 0.5-7/8 in. broad, and as much in thickness, sub-cylindric, with a broad concave channel extending from base to apex, having acute edges, but with hardened red-brown margins at the apical part only, rather abruptly acute or tapering from 2-3 in. below the apex into a subulate point 0.25-3/4 in. long, dark green, marked with subparallel transverse pale green bands 1/8-0.5 in. apart. ADULT PLANTS with 1-2 or rarely 3 leaves a growth, stiffly erect, cylindric or nearly so, with a concave channel having acute green edges extending from the base quite to the apex on the face, nearly smooth or very slightly rough, 4-9 ft. long, 1.5-2.5 in. in diameter at the base, gradually tapering to an acute hardened pale brown apex with a short stout subulate point; the larger leaves are as much as 1.25 in. in diameter at 1 ft. below the apex, and the channel is 1/6-1/3 in. deep and 0.25-1 1/3 in. broad at the base, becoming 3/8-2/3 in. broad near the apex; the sides and back are marked with 6-20 continuous or interrupted impressed dark longitudinal lines or slight grooves, and there are 2-5 in the channel, dull green, transversely and usually obliquely banded with paler green, slightly glaucous, the bands nearly or quite disappear with age. FLOWERS unknown. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria stuckyi.

4/26/2024, 3:25:49 AM

居家客製化植物 前幾天收到很久之前購買植物的客人訊息,原先詢問是否可以協助換盆換土,因為這位客人離我距離很近於是就協助處理,聊天過程中,客人覺得每天早上看到植物都很開心,一整天心情都很愉悅,距離上次購買時間有一年多了,客人希望能請我幫他客製化一盆《特別》好照顧又可以長很大的植物,因為近期都在準備虎尾蘭進口及溫室的事情,於是推薦泰斑龜背芋給這位客人參考,客人看了覺得很特別很好看,也符合好照顧及可以長很大的條件,於是就接下這個案子,客製化主要是看客人需求,想要的植物類型,盆器樣式來製作,除了以上兩個條件,準備客製化植物還有幾項最重要的條件,植物一定是我本人看過挑選,所有介質一定要乾淨,使用品質高的介質來依照客戶居家條件去做搭配,送到客戶手上讓客戶完全不需要擔心,只要擺設好欣賞即可,當然會告知客戶基本的照護方式。 當下製作完成後,有種捨不得讓它離開的感覺,很想要自己收下來,因為對我而言,植物品名雖然一樣但是這世界上也只有這一盆植物的形態代表著它自己獨特的靈魂。 #sansevieriafarmer #plantsdeco #sansevieriaworld #sansevieria #sansevieriataiwan #plantcoaction #sansevieriavariegated #plantslife #plantinspiration #indoorplants #plantlife #plantsmakepeoplehappy #soilmixed #sansevierialover #sansevieriacollector #chenplants #monsterathaiconstellation #chen#Chen植 #客製化植物 #居家植物 #泰斑龜背芋

4/25/2024, 5:40:01 PM

: A MONOGRAPH (47/90) Angola. Cultivated specimens! Described from living plants cultivated at Kew. Although Bojer, when publishing the name in 1837, stated that this species was a native of Zanzibar, there appears to be no evidence that it has ever been found wild there. Its history is as follows: —Bojer states that it was only cultivated (not wild) in Mauritius. According to Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., 1903, p. 169, it was introduced into the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, from the Isle of Bourbon, by Richard, in 1845. In 1861 Carrière published two excellent figures of it in the Revue Horticole, made from a living plant which had been sent from Mauritius to the Paris Exhibition in 1855, and Sir William Jackson Hooker (Botanical Magazine, t. 5093), writing at the end of 1858, also states that living roots had then been received from that island. So that up to that period S. cylindrica was only known from the islands mentioned. But in 1855 a plant was received at Kew from Angola under the name of Ifé, which was found to be the same as one of which fibre was exhibited at the Paris Exhibition of 1855 under the name of Sansevieria angolensis, Welw. This plant flowered and was figured for the Botanical Magazine. When, however, the plant of Sansevieria cylindrica, Boj., above alluded to, was received in 1858 from Mauritius, it was discovered to be identical with that from Angola. It is therefore probable that it was introduced by the Portuguese from Angola into Zanzibar or Mauritius, as the identity of the Angola and Mauritius plants seems to be beyond dispute, for on the back of the original drawing of plate 5093 of the Botanical Magazine the artist, Mr. W. Fitch, has written "Sansevieria angolensis. Hort. Kew, Aug. 58." from which it is certain that the drawing was made from Angola plant, a descendant of which is still thriving at Kew, and this drawing and the living plant exactly agree with the figure made from the Mauritius plant published in the Revue Horticole by Carrière, whilst none of the allied species at all coincide with the latter figure, especially as to the stiffly erect leaves. 🌿📷: Sansevieria cylindrica 'Boncel'

4/25/2024, 2:23:39 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (46/90) Hook, Bot. Mag. t. 5093; Carrière in Rev. Hort., 1861, p. 447, figs. 109-110, and 1901, p. 192; Morren in Belg. Hort., vol. ix., p. 274, fig. 27; Baker in Journ. Linn. Soc., vol. xiv, p. 549; in Kew Bulletin, May, 1887, p. 9, fig. 6; and in Fl. Trop. Afr., vol. vii., p. 335; Rudolph in Rev. Hort., 1901, pp. 191-192, fig. 70; Godef.—Leb., Sansev. Gigant. Afr. Orient., p. 14; Gérôme and Labroy in Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat., 1903, pp. 169, 173, fig. 16; De Wildeman Notices Pl. Utiles du Congo, p. 624, fig. 16, and pp. 625, 631, with fig.; and Etud. Fl. Bas-et Moyen Congo, vol. ii. p. 121, t. 50-51; Volkens in Notizbl. Bot. Gart. Berlin. Append. 22, p. 52, fig. 21. S. angolensis, Welw. ex Hook, in Report on Veget. Prod. Paris Exhib., 1855, p. 148; Welw. Apont. p. 543; Carrière in Rev. Hort., 1861, pp. 447, 449; Monteiro, Angola and the River Congo, vol. i. pp. 45, 103; Hiern, Cat. Afr. Pl. Welw., vol. ii. p. 25. S. guineensis, Weiner Illustr. Gart.—Zeit, 1887, p. 421, fig. 80, not of Willdenow. Angola. Loanda; plentiful on sunny hills from Loanda to Cacuaco and elsewhere, Welwitsch, (3749)! and cultivated specimens! Known in Angola as the "Ifé" or "Ifi" plant, and used for making ropes, etc. Described from a living plant; a portion of the original figured in the Botanical Magazine at t. 5093. According to Monteiro, "Sansevieria angolensis is very plentiful all over the littoral region of Angola." Replacing S. longiflora at about Musserra, a little to the north of Ambriz. He however, collected no dried specimens of either species, so that it is possible more than these two species may have been included by him under these names. Sansevieria cylindrica var. patula, N. E. Brown LEAVES, 3-6 to a growth, sometimes erectly diverging, but more often variably recurving or spreading, from a slight but somewhat abrupt recurvature near the base, 2/3-1 in. thick from front to back and 0.5-7/8 in. thick from side to side immediately above the 1.5-3 in. long sheathing portion; rather shortly or somewhat abruptly pointed. TUBE OF THE FLOWER 5.5-9 lin. long. Otherwise as in the type. 🌿📷: Sansevieria cylindrica var. patula

4/25/2024, 2:04:32 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (45/90) 20. Sansevieria cylindrica, Bojer, Hort. Maurit. p. 349 STEMLESS, with a stout creeping rootstock 1-1.5 in. thick. LEAVES 3-4 to a growth, besides some basal sheaths, 2-ranked, stiffly erect, not at all recurved near the base, faintly rough, 2.5-5 ft. long, cylindric or slightly compressed-cylindric, 7/8-1.25 in. thick from front to back and 3/4-1 in. thick from side to side at the base, immediately above their 3-5.5 in. long sheathing portion, gradually tapering thence to a hardened acute whitish point 1/6-0.25 in. long, the outer sometimes with a very shallow and narrow groove down the inner face, green, or sometimes whitish-green, with distinct transverse bands of darker green, the banding becoming fainter with age; glaucous when exposed to the sun, marked with numerous interrupted and continuous longitudinal dark green or blackish-green lines, of which 4-6 extend nearly to the apex, and with age and the withering of the leaves become more or less impressed as slight grooves. FLOWER-STEM 2-3 ft. high, its basal part bearing 2-3 distinct pale brownish sheaths 1 3/4-2 3/4 in. long, its upper part with spike-like racemes 1.25-2.5 ft. long, with 5-6 flowers in each cluster. BRACTS 1/6-2/5 in. long, lanceolate or ovate-lanceolate, acuminate; bracteoles smaller, all spreading, membranous, very pale brownish when the flowers are expanded. FLOWERS, 5-6 in a cluster, white or tinted, with reddish pedicels jointed below or sometimes at the middle, with the persistent and deciduous parts each 1-2 lin. long; tube 2/3-1 in. long, slender, 2/4 lin. in diameter, and before the ovary swells scarcely enlarged at the base; lobes 2/3-3/4 in. long, linear, obtuse, revolute. 🌿📷: Sansevieria cylindrica with inflorescence.

4/25/2024, 1:54:19 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (44/90) Tropical Africa. South Angola: among rocks in open forest near Km. 108.5 on the Mossamedes Railway at 1700 ft.; Pearson, (2073)! Also occurs between Gambos and Houmbe, ex Pearson. Damaraland: Grootfontein, in Upingtonia, Schinz, (15)! Described from a living plant sent to Kew by Prof. Pearson, and from seedlings raised from the fruit that accompanied it. I have not seen an inflorescence, and Prof. Pearson informs me that when he discovered the plant the flowering season was over, and, although he examined many plants, only some remains of a single inflorescence was found, consisting of the base of the flower-stem still attached to the plant, a single cluster of fruit and some loose berries laying on the ground, from it could not be determined if the inflorescence was a panicle or spike-like raceme. In all probability S. Pearsonii is the same species as that mentioned under the name of S. cylindrica by Baum (Kunene-Sambesi Expedition, pp. 25, 28, 78, 197, 460, 470 and 510), and (on p. 197) stated to have narrow channel down the face of the leaf, found growing under trees and shrubs on termite-anthills along Chitanda River, between Kakele and Goundkopje at 4000 ft. elevation, and in the region of the Cunene and Kubango Rivers; also by Schinz (Deutsch-Sudwest-Africa, pp. 238, 472) as occurring near the Cunene Rivers in Amboland, which is about 150 miles south-east of where Prof. Pearson collected the plant here described. The true S. cylindrica. Bojer, is a native of Loanda in Northern Angola, and its leaves are destitute of the acute channel down the inner face which characterises S. Pearsonii; they are also of a darker green. 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria pearsonii.

4/24/2024, 3:48:03 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (43/90) 19. Sansevieria pearsonii, N. E. Brown, in Kew Bulletin, 1911, p. 97. STEMLESS, with a stout creeping rootstock. LEAVES of seedling or juvenile plants 8-10 in a rosette, directed to all parts of the compass, and recurved-spreading, rigid, 2.5-12 in. long, the outermost or smaller 7/8-1.25 in. broad, lanceolate, acute or acuminate, broadly and shallowly concave above, convex beneath and about 1/6-0.25 in. thick, the inner gradually becoming thicker, more deeply concave, narrower, and finally passing into the erect and cylindric form; dull dark green, indistinctly or the inner distinctly banded with paler green; margins acute, with a red-brown line inside a membranous white edge; epidermis rather rough. LEAVES of adult growths 3-5, in two ranks, straight, or nearly so, rigid, erect, but gradually diverging from base to apex, so that the inner are about 0.5-1 ft. apart at the tips; smooth, 1 1/6-1 1/4 in. thick from side to side at the base, cylindric, slightly compressed, gradually tapering from the base to a very acute, rigid, terete-subulate (not compressed) whitish point 1/3-1 in. long, and with a channel much narrower than the breadth of the leaf on the inner face and extending nearly to the apex, concave at the basal part, acutely triangular at the upper part, slightly glaucous-green or bluish-green, when young somewhat faintly banded with paler green, rather inconspicuously marked with numerous very interrupted darker lines, and 9-12 continuous slightly impressed lines, forming slight longitudinal grooves; margins of the channel acute from base to apex, greenish-white in young leaves, becoming red-brown with a whitish edge. FLOWER-STEM unknown; only one flower-cluster in fruit was found, with 4 pedicels 1/3 in. long, jointed at about 1/8 in. above the base. BERRIES orange. 🌿📷: Juvenile plant of Sansevieria pearsonii.

4/24/2024, 3:36:44 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (42/90) 18. Sansevieria sordida. N. E. Brown ROOTSTOCK, creeping. STEM, none or very short, and concealed by the closely-imbricating leaf-bases. LEAVES, 4-12 to a growth, 2-ranked, slightly spreading fanwise, straight, or slightly curved, remarkably rough, 2.25-3.5 ft. long, 0.5-3/4 in. thick from front to back and 1/3-0.5 in. thick from side to side at the base, slightly compressed-cylindric, tapering into an acute spine-like whitish or grey point marked with brown at its base 1/3-0.5 lin. long, with a channel all down the face, which is acute, and much narrower than the leaf for the greater part of its length, becoming flattened towards the base, and with 11-15 or perhaps more grooves continuous, those between them interrupted; margins of the channel with a very narrow hardened dark brown border extending to the apex and more or less edged with a white membrane. FLOWER-STEM 1-2 ft. high and 0.25 in. thick at the base; dull light green, minutely dotted with white, the upper 2/3-3/4 with spike-like racemes of numerous flower clusters, and the lower third bearing 2-3 distant membranous sheaths 3/4-1.5 in. long, tapering from their base to a fine simulate point. BRACTS 1/8-0.25 in. long, simulate and soon withering from a stout green base, becoming rather inconspicuous. FLOWERS 7-14 in a cluster, erect or ascending and pale dingy greenish when in bud, becoming horizontal or distinctly drooping when expanded; pedicels 1/3-0.5 in. long, jointed at or below the middle, with the persistent part 1/8-0.25 in. long, slender; tube 3.5-5 lin. long, white or greenish; lobes 7-8 lin. long, revolute, linear, obtuse, white on the inner face, green with minute dull purplish dots on the back. The inflorescence collectively is of a pale dull greenish colour. Native country unknown. Described from a living plant cultivated at Kew, which flowered in March, 1910. 🌿📷: Sansevieria ballyi (Rauh Ke 874) collected by Werner Rauh in Kenya with no precise location between Voi and Mombassa in 1960.

4/23/2024, 2:54:34 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (41/90) 17. Sansevieria rhodesiana, N. E. Brown STEMLESS, with a stout creeping rootstock. ADULT LEAVES, 3-4 to a growth, two-ranked, straight, or nearly so, and stiffly erect, sub-parallel, with the tips of the inner pair not or scarcely farther apart than at the base; slightly rough or nearly smooth, 3-5.5 ft. long, 1 1/8-1.25 in. thick from side to side, and 3/4-1.25 in. thick from front to back at the base; sub-cylindric, gradually tapering from the base to a stout hard acute whitish or whitish-brown point 0.25-0.5 in. long, with a broad open concave channel on the face of the outer leaves and an acute channel much narrower than the breadth of the leaf on the inner leaves, extending from the base nearly or quite to the apex, uniformly deep green, without transverse bands, but marked with very numerous continuous or interrupted longitudinal darker green lines, of which 10-12 or more are impressed forming slight furrows; margins of the channel acute, dark red-brown, with or without membranous edges. FLOWER-STEM about 1 3/4 ft. high and 1/3 in. thick at the base, pale green, mottled with darker, bearing about 2 narrow acuminate sheaths 1.5-2.5 in. long of numerous flower-clusters above. BRACTS inconspicuous, 1.5-2 lin. long, membranous, acuminate. FLOWERS 8-9 in a cluster; pedicels 2.5-3 lin. long, jointed at or slightly below the middle, with the persistent part 1-1.25 lin. long, and the deciduous part thickened upwards, dingy whitish-green; tube 4-6 lin. long, 1 lin. in diameter at the very slightly swollen base, rather more slender above, white; lobes 7.5-9 lin. long, linear, obtuse, white. This species is closely related to Sansevieria pearsonii, N. E. Br., but certainly seems distinct, when the living plants are placed side by side. The leaves of S. rhodesiana do not taper nearly rapidly as those of S. pearsonii, are parallel, and not diverging, more compressed, especially at the much acute point, and the dark green lines are continuous (not interrupted) and more evident than in S. pearsonii. 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria rhodesiana

4/22/2024, 2:55:07 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (40/90) 16. Sansevieria intermedia, N. E. Brown in Kew Bulletin, 1914, p. 83 (fig. 6) STEMLESS. LEAVES of adult plants 2-7 to a growth, not 2-ranked, erect or ascending, slightly recurving, stiff, not quite smooth, but with a surface something like that of ground glass, 1.25-4 ft. long, 0.5-3/4 in. thick; the outer sometimes somewhat half cylindric with acute edges to the concave channel; the inner cylindric, channeled all down the face or occasionally the central leaf is without a channel, gradually tapering from the base to a very acute spne-like but not very rigid whitish point, with the channel much narrower than or at the basal part sometimes nearly as broad as the leaf, and having acute green or whitish edges at the basal part, passing into obtusely rounded green edges at the upper part, and with numerous slight grooves or impressed longitudinal lines on the sides and back, at first dull deep green, becoming slightly bluish-green, with or without a faint indication of transverse banding. FLOWER-STEM 8-18 in. high, with 2-3 acuminate sheaths on the basal 2-3 in. and a dense spike-like racemes of flower-clusters above, light greyish "frosted" cells when examined with a lens. CLUSTERS 3-6 flowered, very crowded. BRACTS 1-2 lin. long, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, acute, membranous. FLOWERS ascending-spreading; pedicels 1 lin. or less long, jointed at the apex; tube 7-9 lin. long, slightly ovoid-inflated and 1.25 lin. in diameter at the base, more slender above, pale greenish; lobes 0.5-3/4 in. long, linear, obtuse, revolute, white or greenish-white and minutely dusted with purplish on the back of the apex. British East Africa. Tsavo district, Powell, (9)! and without precise locality, Powell (4)! Described from a living plant received from Nairobi in 1906, which flowered at Kew November 5, 1913. 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria intermedia.

4/21/2024, 2:56:05 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (39/90) 15. Sansevieria patens, N. E. Brown STEMLESS. ROOTSTOCK creeping 3/4-1 in. thick. LEAVES 5-10 to a growth, 2-ranked, recurved-spreading from their base in fan-like manner, slightly rough, the inner of adult plants 1.5-3 ft. long, 2/3-1 2/3 in. thick from front to back and 2/3-1.25 in. thick from side to side at the base, the outer gradually shorter, compressed-cylindric, with an acute channel much narrower than the leaf extending from base to apex on the face, tapering upwards and at the apex somewhat abruptly contracted into a hard acute whitish point 0.25-0.5 in. long, marked with dark green and paler green transverse bands, becoming bluish-green with age, longitudinally marked with numerous blackish-green lines, several of them continuous to the apex, others interrupted; margins of the channel acute, green, or only whitish along the basal 1-6 in. FLOWER-STEM 1.25-2 ft. long, pale green, bearing 2-3 acuminate sheaths 3/4-2 in. long on the basal third and a spike-like racemes of flower-clusters on the upper two-thirds. BRACTS 1.25-3 lin. long, lanceolate, acute, membranous. FLOWERS 2-3 in a cluster, white; pedicels 2.5-3 lin. long; tube 4.5-5 lin. long, 3/4 lin. in diameter slightly inflated at the base; lobes 6 lin. broad, linear, revolute. Tropical Africa. Origin unknown, but probably British East Africa. Described from a living plant which flowered at Kew on April 4, 1910. 🌿📷: Mature plant of Sansevieria patens (syn. S. Ed Eby)

4/20/2024, 2:50:49 AM

: A MONOGRAPH (38/90) 14. Sansevieria varians, N. E. Brown STEMLESS. LEAVES 4-8 to a growth, two-ranked erect or ascending, straight or slightly curved, very slightly rough, 1.25-3 3/4 ft. long, 0.5-7/8 in. thick at the base, variable, on some growths of adult plants all or most of the leaves are cylindric, with an acute channel much narrower than the leaf and having green acute edges all down the face, gradually tapering to an acute hard whitish point 1/6-1/3 in. long; on other growths a few of the outer leaves are half cylindric, shortly and somewhat abruptly acute, having a flattish or shallowly through-shaped channel as broad as the leaf down the face, with acute hard red-brown margins often edged with a white membrane when young, dull dark grass-green, not glaucous, with numerous longitudinal dark green lines, some of which, with age, become impressed, forming slight furrows, when young in distinctly banded with dark and lighter green. FLOWER-STEM 2-2.5 ft. high, light glaucous-green or greyish-green, in distinctly marked with transverse mottlings on the upper part, bearing 2 distinct whitish membranous acuminate sheaths 3/4-1.5 in. long on the basal part and a long spike-like racemes of flower-clusters above. BRACTS membranous, 1/6-0.25 in. long, linear or diligent from a broadened base, acute, white. FLOWERS 6-10 in a cluster; pedicels 2-2.25 lin. long, jointed slightly above the middle; tube 5-6 lin. long, white; lobes 7-8 lin. long, recurving or revolute, linear, obtuse, white, speckled with purple at the tips. Country unknown. Described from a living plant which had been cultivated for many years at Kew under the name of Sansevieria zeylanica, so that it may possibly be of Asiatic origin, but it is very closely allied to Sansevieria patens, differing by its leaves not being nearly so stout, fewer to a growth, erect or ascending instead of spreading from the base, and by having more flowers in a cluster. The plant flowered at Kew April 23, 1909, and May 2, 1914. 🌿📷: Sansevieria 'Bandidos', a hybrid of S. ebracteata or S. bandipur x S. downsii

4/19/2024, 2:56:43 AM

Sansevieria mosquito #sansevieria #sansevierialover

4/17/2024, 2:06:05 PM

Sansevieria “ phessant “ ไก่ฟ้า #sansevierialover

4/17/2024, 10:11:24 AM

Новые полки уже забиты, а ещё нужно 10 новичков разместить. Игра в "тетрис" продолжается. #sansevieravarigata #sansevierialover #sansevieriacylindrica #sanseveria #suculentas #succulents #art #indoorjungle #indoorplants

4/17/2024, 9:18:50 AM