taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
03D2FB250D6316397920F97EFE7AE5DC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871700/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871700	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D6316397920F97EFE7AE5DC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871698/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871698	Figure 2. One of the two original plants of Aloe canis, flowering in cultivation in Blantyre, Malawi. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	Figure 2. One of the two original plants of Aloe canis, flowering in cultivation in Blantyre, Malawi. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D6316397920F97EFE7AE5DC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871706/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871706	Figure 4. The specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane in the early-2000s photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2015. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	Figure 4. The specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane in the early-2000s photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2015. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D6316397920F97EFE7AE5DC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871712/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871712	Figure 5. Panicle of the specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2019. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	Figure 5. Panicle of the specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2019. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871700/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871700	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871706/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871706	Figure 4. The specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane in the early-2000s photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2015. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	Figure 4. The specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane in the early-2000s photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2015. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871712/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871712	Figure 5. Panicle of the specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2019. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	Figure 5. Panicle of the specimen of Aloe canis that Ms Ruth Mthawanji received from Reverend Stewart Lane photographed in Blantyre, Malawi, in 2019. Photograph: R. Mthawanji.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871708/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871708	Figure 6. Aloe lateritia var. lateritia in habitat in northernmost Malawi at Ipenza Village in July 1968. The spotted leaves can reach a length of 45cm (18’’), but grow much longer in cultivation when irrigated throughout the year (Hargreaves, 1975: 92) (published earlier in Hargreaves, 1975: Figure 4). Photograph: Bruce J. Hargreaves.	Figure 6. Aloe lateritia var. lateritia in habitat in northernmost Malawi at Ipenza Village in July 1968. The spotted leaves can reach a length of 45cm (18’’), but grow much longer in cultivation when irrigated throughout the year (Hargreaves, 1975: 92) (published earlier in Hargreaves, 1975: Figure 4). Photograph: Bruce J. Hargreaves.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871716/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871716	Figure 7. An inflorescence of Aloe lateritia var. lateritia at the locality noted in the caption of Figure 4, about 1.20m (4 feet) high (Hargreaves, 1975: 92) (published earlier in Hargreaves, 1975: Figure 5). Photograph: Bruce J. Hargreaves	Figure 7. An inflorescence of Aloe lateritia var. lateritia at the locality noted in the caption of Figure 4, about 1.20m (4 feet) high (Hargreaves, 1975: 92) (published earlier in Hargreaves, 1975: Figure 5). Photograph: Bruce J. Hargreaves	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D61163F7920F9C7FE02E23A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871714/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871714	Figure 8. Aloe suffulta in habitat in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi), growing on a river bank (rather likely of the Mwabvi River) in the dense undergrowth of bushes with the long, dry inflorescences literally ‘woven’ through the supporting bushes and emerging through the top, ca. 1970. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	Figure 8. Aloe suffulta in habitat in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi), growing on a river bank (rather likely of the Mwabvi River) in the dense undergrowth of bushes with the long, dry inflorescences literally ‘woven’ through the supporting bushes and emerging through the top, ca. 1970. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D67163F7920FDFDFC5CE0C2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871714/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871714	Figure 8. Aloe suffulta in habitat in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi), growing on a river bank (rather likely of the Mwabvi River) in the dense undergrowth of bushes with the long, dry inflorescences literally ‘woven’ through the supporting bushes and emerging through the top, ca. 1970. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	Figure 8. Aloe suffulta in habitat in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi), growing on a river bank (rather likely of the Mwabvi River) in the dense undergrowth of bushes with the long, dry inflorescences literally ‘woven’ through the supporting bushes and emerging through the top, ca. 1970. Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D67163F7920FDFDFC5CE0C2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871718/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871718	Figure 9. Aloe suffulta: a young plant collected in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi). A living specimen was brought to Blantyre in ca. 1970 (published earlier in Smith & Crouch, 2001: 21 and in Lane, 2004: 45). Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	Figure 9. Aloe suffulta: a young plant collected in what is now the Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve (Malawi). A living specimen was brought to Blantyre in ca. 1970 (published earlier in Smith & Crouch, 2001: 21 and in Lane, 2004: 45). Drawing: Pastor Theo Peter Campbell-Barker.	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
03D2FB250D67163F7920FDFDFC5CE0C2.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7871700/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7871700	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	Figure 1. Distribution of three Aloe species rare in Malawi: 1) A. canis (yellow dots, a = Senga Hills; b = inland from Domira Bay; c = Ntchisi Hills; Central Region); 2) A. lateritia var. lateritia (blue dot = near Ipenza, two records; Northern Region); and 3) A. suffulta (red dot = Mwabvi Wildlife Reserve; Southern Region). Placements of the dots are partly approximations. The map insert shows the position of Malawi (red) in Africa (map: Wikimedia Commons 2019; insert map: mapsof.net 2015).	2020-06-26	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela		Zenodo	biologists	Thiede, Joachim;Campbell-Barker, Theo Peter;Hargreaves, Bruce J.;Smith, Gideon F.;Figueiredo, Estrela			
