Aloe saponaria (Aiton) Haw.
Plant acaulescent, densely caespitose, or a caulescent basal rosette. Leaves 12-20 in a dense rosette, 15-30 × 5-12 cm, c. 5 mm thick, lanceolate, erect and spreading, ± recurved near apex, flat to ± canaliculate, dark green or purple-tinged, with glaucous frosting and numerous white oblong spots in irregular transverse bands, margins cartilaginous, sinuate-dentate with brown horny pungent teeth 3-5 mm long and c. 10 mm distant. Scapes simple or branched, 40-100 cm high, racemes 10-12 × 12-16 cm, densely capitate. Flowers yellow, salmon-pink, orange to red, erect, later drooping; pedicels 35-45 mm long, bracteate; segments 3.5-4.5 cm long, connate below with tube twice as long as spreading lobes. Capsule 2.5-4 cm long, globose-trigonous.
N. North Auckland - Karikari Peninsula on Mt Puheke and Tokerau Beach, Paihia; Auckland - Auckland City, Rangitoto Id. S. Canterbury - Christchurch. Garden escape.
(S. Africa)
First record: Cheeseman 1883: 293, as A. latifolia Haworth.
First collection: Remuera, T. F. Cheeseman, 1893? ().
FL. 11-12.
Formerly treated as A. latifolia (Haw.) Haw. which is now considered a form of A. saponaria with broader less spotted leaves and stouter glaucous scapes (Reynolds, G. W. The Aloes of South Africa 1950, 228).