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				haang jorakae (หางจระเข้)  
Thai. ‘Crocodile's tail’. Thai name for a species of succulent plant with thick, 
lance-shaped leaves and with the botanical names Aloe vera and Aloe barbadensis. The margin of these 
leaves is serrated and has small white, tooth-like projections, somewhat 
resembling the tail of a 
              crocodile, hence its name in Thai. These fleshy, green 
leaves, though very bitter and unpalatable, are edible and can be found amongst 
the vegetables on supermarket shelves (fig.). 
Aloe vera  is a plant
extremophile, i.e. an extreme plant, that is 
evolutionarily adapted to thrive in environments characterized by a high degree 
of abiotic stress, in this case extreme heat and drought. The thick and juicy 
inner mesophyll layer of the leaves evolved as a reservoir of water for the 
plant to keep up with photosynthesis during droughts. This unique adaptation to 
extremely high temperatures and dry conditions makes it an
extremophyte. The goopy sap of this succulent purportedly has many medicinal uses, such as in the treatment of 
diabetes and a moisturizer used in skin care. 
Besides its use as a herb it is grown as an ornamental plant, too. 
Also called  
waan haang jorakae, 
with the prefix waan (ว่าน) 
being a general name for  
			sedges, 
flags (plants with a bladed leaf),
    
	orchids, hemps and as in this case, herbs. 
It is one of the few plants that in English is known only by its binomial name, 
although it is sometimes nicknamed Medicine Plant. See also
        jorakae. 
See also POSTAGE 
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