Molecular studies, especially those based on DNA, have eliminated much of the uncertainty and guesswork that once characterized systematic botany. The classification of the genus Aloe and its relatives (Asphodelus, Kniphofia, Bulbine, etc.) is a good example. Older classification systems put Aloe in the family Liliaceae, but comparisons of DNA sequences have shown that this is clearly wrong.
The molecular phylogenetic studies put Aloe in the very large order Asparagales. Within Asparagales, it is either in the family Asphodelaceae or the family Xanthorrhoeaceae. The choice between these two families is not a question of what is related to what, but a question of what groups to put at the rank of family. What some call Asphodelaceae is treated by others as the subfamily Asphodeloideae of the family Xanthorrhoeaceae. I must admit a personal preference for rankless systems like phylocode. As long as one knows what group is a subset of what other group, i dont think that it matters much whether a group is called a family, a subfamily, or whatever. Wikipedia has a good article on Xanthorrhoeaceae that goes into more detail.
Aloe Vera belongs to the family Xanthorrhoeaceae. This plant is known for its healing properties, especially its ability to relieve the sting of sunburn.
Aloe Vera belongs in the Phylum Magnoliophyta
Asphodelaceae is the family of Aloe Vera.
Monocot
No. Aloe is a genus of plants with about 150 different species, of which Aloe vera, also known as Aloe barbadensis is one. The emolient substance derived from the plant is commonly referred to simply as aloe, but the commercial products made from this substance are usually call "aloe vera".In any case Aloe vera and Aloe barbadensis are the two taxonomical names for this plant, but Aloe Vera is the only one used as a common name.
no it is a natural product from the Aloe vera plant
enzymes for aloe vera is glucose and manose.
Aloe vera is the botanical name.
The Aloe vera leaves store a fleshy substance which is often used as face primer.
Aloe is a genus. Aloe vera is a species.
No Scientific classification Kingdom:------Plantae Division:-------Magnoliophyta Class:----------Liliopsida Order:----------Asparagales Family:---------Asphodelaceae Genus:---------Aloe Species:-------A. vera Binomial name: Aloe vera
The scientific name for aloe vera is actually Aloe vera.This is for the common succulent that is used widely for medicinal and cosmetic purposes.Other species of aloe plants exist all over the world, and their taxonomy can be found athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloe_vera#Taxonomy_and_etymology
aloe vera
Aloe vera is considered a vegetable family. It is close to garlic andonionfamily though from the taste and look you wouldn't make that conclusion right away. I specialize in aloe vera based products so been around the answer.
1200 milligrams of aloe vera juice is 1.2 grams of aloe vera juice. If you woudl like to find out about the history of aloe vera see http://counterpointwisdom.com/aloevera/history-of-aloe-vera/aloe-vera-usage-history/
Aloe vera belongs to Monocotyledons
aloe vera = Sabila
Aloe vera is the botanical or scientific name of the Aloe vera plant!It does however have a number of other synonyms such as Aloe barbadensis (which to a certain degree are also correct)
aloe vera!
Aloe Vera has Parallel leaf venation and taproot system
Aloe Juice and Aloe Vera juice are the same thing. The name is just different but they are both from the aloe vera plant.