taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
C6508784FFCAD713FF102B2483A99A25.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/10438615/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10438615	FIGURE 1. Kalanchoe deliae from central-east Mpumalanga, South Africa. A. Lower, leafy section of a stem. The opposite-decussate, amplexicaul, erect to slightly erectly spreading leaves are infused with rusty brown along the leaf margins only. B. Leaves are light green, obovate to broadly elliptic, sometimes very slightly curved up along margins and have a ± cuneate base that is sometimes very slightly auriculate. C. Roots are fibrous to slightly thickened and the stems are a uniform light green colour. D. The erect to leaning, club-shaped inflorescences are apically dense- and many-flowered. E. The flowering portion of the inflorescences is 110–130(–150) mm long and the branches are borne oppositely, with the branches slanted away from the main flowering stem at an angle of 10–15°. The internodes are very short, so yielding dense-clustered inflorescences. F. All plant parts are densely white-wax-covered. The adaxial surface of the corolla lobes are light green and light rusty brownish-infused towards the tips, with the margins usually paler. All photographs: Gideon F. Smith.	FIGURE 1. Kalanchoe deliae from central-east Mpumalanga, South Africa. A. Lower, leafy section of a stem. The opposite-decussate, amplexicaul, erect to slightly erectly spreading leaves are infused with rusty brown along the leaf margins only. B. Leaves are light green, obovate to broadly elliptic, sometimes very slightly curved up along margins and have a ± cuneate base that is sometimes very slightly auriculate. C. Roots are fibrous to slightly thickened and the stems are a uniform light green colour. D. The erect to leaning, club-shaped inflorescences are apically dense- and many-flowered. E. The flowering portion of the inflorescences is 110–130(–150) mm long and the branches are borne oppositely, with the branches slanted away from the main flowering stem at an angle of 10–15°. The internodes are very short, so yielding dense-clustered inflorescences. F. All plant parts are densely white-wax-covered. The adaxial surface of the corolla lobes are light green and light rusty brownish-infused towards the tips, with the margins usually paler. All photographs: Gideon F. Smith.	2023-12-28	Smith, Gideon F.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.			
C6508784FFCAD713FF102B2483A99A25.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/10438617/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10438617	FIGURE 2. Kalanchoe luciae. A. Plant in flower.The inflorescence has a dense white-wax covering. B. Pseudo-rosette showing intensely red-infused leaves. C. Terminal portion of an inflorescence. The internodes are long, so yielding inflorescences with ± regularly spaced flower clusters. D. The adaxial corolla lobe surface varies from white, as here, to pale yellowish. In orientation the corolla lobes generally vary from strongly reflexed to completely flattened against the corolla tube, as here. Note how the corolla tubes bulge in the centre. All photographs: Gideon F. Smith.	FIGURE 2. Kalanchoe luciae. A. Plant in flower.The inflorescence has a dense white-wax covering. B. Pseudo-rosette showing intensely red-infused leaves. C. Terminal portion of an inflorescence. The internodes are long, so yielding inflorescences with ± regularly spaced flower clusters. D. The adaxial corolla lobe surface varies from white, as here, to pale yellowish. In orientation the corolla lobes generally vary from strongly reflexed to completely flattened against the corolla tube, as here. Note how the corolla tubes bulge in the centre. All photographs: Gideon F. Smith.	2023-12-28	Smith, Gideon F.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.			
C6508784FFCAD713FF102B2483A99A25.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/10438625/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10438625	FIGURE 6. A scorched specimen of Kalanchoe deliae at its type locality after a veld fire moved through its natural grassland habitat. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	FIGURE 6. A scorched specimen of Kalanchoe deliae at its type locality after a veld fire moved through its natural grassland habitat. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	2023-12-28	Smith, Gideon F.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.			
C6508784FFCAD713FF102B2483A99A25.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/10438627/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10438627	FIGURE 7. Delia Oosthuizen (1969–) for whom K. deliae is named. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	FIGURE 7. Delia Oosthuizen (1969–) for whom K. deliae is named. Photograph: Gideon F. Smith.	2023-12-28	Smith, Gideon F.		Zenodo	biologists	Smith, Gideon F.			
