Encephalartos aemulans, the Ngotshe cycad, is a species of cycad endemic to South Africa. It is listed by the IUCN as Critically Endangered and by CITES in Appendix I. Only 100-250 are believed to be left, with a decreasing population trend. Its main threat is collecting of wild specimens.
These plants have a tall, unbranched stem that can grow up to 3 m tall and 35 cm wide. The leaves, which can reach 2 m in length, are made up of pointed leaflets with spiny edges, each about 12âÂÂ15 cm long, arranged oppositely along the stem at an angle of 135ð. This species is dioecious, meaning it has separate male and female plants. The male plants have oval, yellow cones that are 29âÂÂ38 cm long and 14âÂÂ18 cm wide, with broad, rhombic microsporophylls. The female cones are yellow-green, 35âÂÂ40 cm long, and 20âÂÂ23 cm wide, with macrosporophylls that have a bumpy surface. The seeds are oblong, about 25âÂÂ30 mm long, and covered with red sarcotesta.
The species is endemic to KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa, were a single population is known. It occurs among sandstone cliffs in shortgrass savannah at altitudes of 1,000-1,100 m, with individual specimens found at lower altitudes.