Assessor: Sarah Schumann
According to the SANBI Red List Assessment, this species is Rare as it is range restricted and experienced illegal succulent collecting and habitat degradation in the past but is not currently facing significant threat (Lötter et al. 2020). An internet survey indicated that this genus is very popular in trade, and that there is a very high demand. Plants of this genus were among those targeted and/or confiscated during a recent criminal prosecution of illegal plant collecting (Confiscation Lists (2018-2021) provided by Cape Nature, SANBI Karoo Desert Botanical Garden and Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden). Aloe species are widely utilised for traditional and medicinal purposes and are also popular in domestic and international horticulture trade (Grace, 2011). Many wild aloe species are threatened by over-exploitation for the succulent plant trade as well as over-utilisation for cosmetics and natural products which makes rare, endemic and utility taxa conservation priority (Grace, 2011). It is believed that the most sought after and so potentially vulnerable species among plant collectors, are rare endemics and difficult to grow species (Cousins & Witkowski, 2012).
Cousins, S.R. and Witkowski, E.T.F., 2012. African aloe ecology: a review. Journal of Arid Environments, 85, pp.1-17.
Grace, O.M., 2011. Current perspectives on the economic botany of the genus Aloe L.(Xanthorrhoeaceae). South African Journal of Botany, 77(4), pp.980-987.
Lötter, M., Burrows, J.E. & von Staden, L. 2020. Aloe nubigena Groenew. National Assessment: Red List of South African Plants version 2020.1.
This taxon is a range restricted, locally common and known from 10 subpopulations (Lötter et al. 2020).
Lötter, M., Burrows, J.E. & von Staden, L. 2020. Aloe nubigena Groenew. National Assessment: Red List of South African Plants version 2020.1.
This taxon is rare as well as its range restriction, makes this species vulnerable to population loss. A small population may result in insufficient levels of recruitment if the species is to recover. This taxon is initially solitary but then proliferates to small dense clusters (van Jaarsveld, 2009). Were exploitation to also occur, recruitment and recovery may be poor.
van Jaarsveld, E. 2009. Aloe nubigena Groenew. PlantZAfrica. Available at: http://pza.sanbi.org/aloe-nubigena