Kalanchoe beharensis is an
evergreen shrub, tall. The stem is about long, slender and knotted.
Leaves are olive green, triangular-lanceolate shaped,
decussately arranged (pairs at right-angles to each other) with leaf margins that are doubly
crenate (crinkled). Each leaf is about long and wide. The bottoms of the leaves are glabrous (smooth and glossy), and covered with a woolly hair towards the apex. The leaf hairs are brown, and the tips of the teeth are darker. The hairs on the stem, younger leaves, and
petioles (leaf stalks) are white. A sign of older leaves is concavity on the upper surface. The types of
trichome present on the leaves of
Kalanchoe vary among the different species. The different types of trichomes are an indicator of adaptation to a particular environment. On the leaf blade of
K. beharensis there are trichomes of the non-glandular, bushy three-branched type. This type of trichome is dead, with evidence of
tannin.
K. beharensis trichomes are also characterized by striped cuticular ornamentation on their surface. Glandular trichomes are also present on the leaves, with more on petioles than on leaf blades, and more on the top of the leaf as opposed to the bottom.
Inflorescences Inflorescences are high, forming a branched
corymb. Flowers are on short pedicels (stalks). The
calyx is 7 mm long with lobes that are oblong and
acuminate (tapering to a point). The
corolla tube is urn-shaped and 7 mm long. Blooming occurs from spring to summer, and flowers are small and yellowish. ==Reproduction==