Entada rangei, commonly known as the skew-leaved elephant-root, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae.
[2] It is native to Tanzania, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, northern South Africa, southern Angola and northwestern Namibia.
During spring or early summer,[3] while still leafless, long, sulphur-yellow flower spikes decorate the plants.
[1] Elephantorrhiza rangei Harms was named for Paul Range (1879-1952), a naturalist and geologist who travelled extensively in Namibia.
[2] In 1908 he collected material of an isolated population in dry savanna beside the Löwen River, at Naute in southern Namibia.