Gazania rigens is a spreading, low-growing,
half-hardy perennial, growing to tall and wide, with blue-grey foliage and brilliant yellow, daisy-like
composite flowerheads throughout the summer. It is a
herbaceous plant that is perennial in South Africa and in the Mediterranean regions, and
annual in the gardens of colder regions. It rarely exceeds and forms
tufts, often very abundant. Its leaves all basal, numerous, narrow and more or less
lanceolate, usually entire, sometimes pennatilobed. The
obverse of the leaves is shiny green, the lapel grayish white. Like all compounds, gazania flowers in flower heads that are often taken for simple flowers. The capitula are solitary at the end of
peduncles just beyond the leaves. Each
capitulum is formed by a central disc of tubular flowers, surrounded by
ligulate peripheral flowers, whose color is very variable. The orange-yellow flowers are however the most numerous, often with black spots at the base of the ligules. The fruit is an
achene, containing several seeds. , showcasing its composite
inflorescence structure. ==Naturalisation==