Study of the geographical variation of yellow-flowered Teucrium sect. Polium species using morphological, chemical, and cytological analyses shows that the group of North African taxa is both differentiated from the European group and homogeneous with it. It displays stable vegetative and floral characters that are common to all the taxa. The essential differences concern the indumentum structure and the habit of the plants. The diversity of environments has enhanced the expression of successive radiations of the group. The first doubtless originated in the Betic-Rif zone and in particular in the southeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula. These radiations probably first gave the group T. aureum, now endemic in the Ibero-Provençal mountains. The species then became better differentiated in North Africa. Differentiation took place in the mountain ranges (Rif, Atlas, and Hoggar) and some Mediterranean islands (off the eastern coast of Tunisia) for the current species with narrow endemism and in desert regions (steppes and the Sahara) for those with wider endemism.