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Description
anthurium vittarifolium hybrid Anthurium vittariifoliumAnthurium vittariifolium Anthurium vittariifolium is an epiphytic strap leaf Anthurium with a compact crown and long, narrow blades that hang downward as the plant matures. The leaves are glossy to softly satin, ribbon like in outline, and carried from short petioles, giving the species its long, suspended profile. An elevated pot or hanging basket gives the foliage vertical space. The leaves can extend freely below the container, showing their slim
Anthurium vittariifolium
Anthurium vittariifolium is an epiphytic strap-leaf Anthurium with a compact crown and long, narrow blades that hang downward as the plant matures. The leaves are glossy to softly satin, ribbon-like in outline, and carried from short petioles, giving the species its long, suspended profile.
An elevated pot or hanging basket gives the foliage vertical space. The leaves can extend freely below the container, showing their slim blade shape, central midrib and naturally pendent habit. Young plants may start with shorter blades, then become more distinctive as each new leaf gains length.
Anthurium vittariifolium strap-leaf features
- Growth habit: Epiphytic Anthurium with a small crown and naturally pendent foliage.
- Leaf shape: Long, narrow, strap-like blades with a clean central midrib.
- Leaf surface: Glossy to semi-glossy green, usually firmer and more leathery with age.
- Container behaviour: Needs vertical space below the pot as the leaves lengthen.
- Mature form: Long pendent leaves descend below the pot when the plant has enough vertical clearance.
Habitat and growth behaviour of Anthurium vittariifolium
Anthurium vittariifolium is native from southeastern Colombia to Peru and Brazil (Amazonas), where it grows in wet tropical forest regions as an epiphytic subshrub. Its roots are adapted to airy, tree-supported positions with regular moisture, airflow and loose organic material.
The epiphytic roots need steady moisture, oxygen and a chunky substrate around the crown. Warm conditions, good humidity and an open mix allow the narrow leaves to lengthen as the plant matures.
Anthurium vittariifolium care guide
- Light: Give bright filtered light. Strong direct sun can bleach or scorch the narrow leaf blades.
- Watering: Water thoroughly, then allow the upper layer of substrate to begin drying before watering again.
- Substrate: Use a loose epiphyte-style mix with bark, coco chips, pumice or perlite, charcoal and a light organic fraction.
- Pot position: Grow in a hanging basket, wall basket or raised planter so developing leaves have space below the pot.
- Temperature: Keep warm, ideally around 20–30 °C, with protection from cool draughts and cold windowsills.
- Humidity: Aim for 60–80% humidity to help new leaves unfurl smoothly and reduce dry tips.
- Air movement: Maintain gentle airflow, especially in enclosed growing spaces, so moisture clears from around the crown.
- Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth with a balanced fertiliser; long leaves show salt stress at the tips.
- Repotting: Refresh the mix when it compacts, working slowly around the root ball and hanging leaves.
- Leaf handling: Support long blades during cleaning or moving; creases and cracks remain visible as the leaf hardens.
- Propagation: Propagate from divisions or stem sections with viable nodes and active roots.
- Mineral substrate: Semi-hydro or mineral substrates can suit established plants when moisture, nutrients and warmth stay consistent.
Common problems in Anthurium vittariifolium
- Brown tips: Check humidity, fertiliser concentration, water quality and drying between waterings.
- Creased new leaves: Stabilise humidity and watering while leaves are expanding.
- Soft crown or yellowing base: Inspect the lower substrate for compaction, sour smell or damaged roots.
- Pale streaks or dry patches: Move the plant away from direct sun and strong heat through glass.
- Distorted growth: Check emerging leaves and midribs for thrips, mites or mechanical damage.
Mature leaf length depends on root health, warmth, humidity and uninterrupted growth. Give the plant enough drop below the pot before the leaves lengthen fully, as mature blades bend easily when they touch shelves or nearby objects.
Anthurium vittariifolium toxicity and safety
Anthurium vittariifolium should be kept away from pets and children that may chew plant material. The plant contains calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth, throat, skin and eyes if plant tissue is chewed or sap contacts sensitive skin. Keep it out of reach of pets and children, and wash hands after pruning or repotting.
Anthurium vittariifolium name origin and botanical background
Anthurium vittariifolium is an accepted species in the Araceae family. The name Anthurium refers back to Greek terms for “flower” and “tail”, describing the spadix form. The epithet vittariifolium means Vittaria-leaved, referring to the plant’s long, narrow blades that recall ribbon-like Vittaria fern fronds.
Anthurium vittariifolium forms a compact crown of long strap-like leaves that hang cleanly from an elevated pot or basket.
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