Haworthia glabrata White Variegated is a 7cm rooted specimen.
• Form: This specimen exhibits an open, star-shaped rosulate structure. The spreading, ascending foliage highlights a distinctly architectural and rigid growth habit.
• Leaves: The foliage is markedly elongate and lanceolate-acuminate, tapering sharply to an acute terminal apex. True to its specific epithet, the leaf margins and abaxial keels are predominantly glabrous, lacking the prominent denticulation or coarse spines found in related taxa.
• Texture & Windows: The opaque epidermal surface is completely devoid of translucent fenestrations. The texture is exceptionally smooth, lacking muricate or verrucose excrescences, and is defined by flush, longitudinal striations that run the entire length of the leaf.
• Color: Under intense environmental stress, this variegated clone displays a spectacular chromatic shift. The typical white longitudinal variegation is currently suffused with vivid golden-yellow and orange hues, set against a deep coppery-bronze to mahogany base, with only trace glaucous green remaining at the emergent core.
























