SKU: 47618433655
philodendron holtonianum mature

philodendron holtonianum mature Philodendron holtonianum – Foliage Factory

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Description

philodendron holtonianum mature Philodendron holtonianum – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron holtonianum Philodendron holtonianum is an Araceae species from Colombia, valued for its narrow juvenile blades and mature foliage that develops into a long, slender, tri lobed form. The mature lobes stay slim, giving older leaves an elongated outline rather than a broad divided shape. Young plants usually show simpler leaves first. With steady upward growth, bright filtered light and a vertical surface for the stem, the foliage can

Philodendron holtonianum

Philodendron holtonianum is an Araceae species from Colombia, valued for its narrow juvenile blades and mature foliage that develops into a long, slender, tri-lobed form. The mature lobes stay slim, giving older leaves an elongated outline rather than a broad divided shape.

Young plants usually show simpler leaves first. With steady upward growth, bright filtered light and a vertical surface for the stem, the foliage can become much longer and more divided over time.

Philodendron holtonianum juvenile leaves and mature form

  • Family: Araceae, the aroid family.
  • Foliage: Green leaves with a narrow outline and thinly coriaceous texture.
  • Juvenile growth: Young leaves are narrow and simpler in shape.
  • Mature growth: Older leaves can become very long and tri-lobed, with narrow lobes.
  • Growth habit: Elongating climbing growth with nodes along the stem.
  • Indoor development: Mature leaf shape develops gradually as the climbing stem gains height and stability.
  • Growth rate: Moderate in warm, bright, humid conditions, slower when kept cool, dry or unsupported.
  • Safety: Toxic if chewed or swallowed by pets or children.

Mature leaf development in Philodendron holtonianum

Philodendron holtonianum moves from narrow juvenile blades into a more divided adult leaf shape as the stem extends. Mature leaves can become very long, slim and thinly leathery, with lobes that remain narrow along the blade.

In habitat, Philodendron holtonianum is associated with wet tropical forest in Colombia, where climbing stems develop in warm, humid, filtered-light conditions. Indoors, a stable support gives the stem a vertical path and helps the leaves develop with less twisting or bending.

Care for Philodendron holtonianum climbing growth

  • Light: Give Philodendron holtonianum bright filtered light. Low light can produce weak, stretched growth and delay mature leaf shape.
  • Support: Provide a pole, plank or similar vertical surface while the plant is still juvenile.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky, airy aroid mix so the climbing root system has oxygen between waterings.
  • Water: Let part of the potting mix dry before watering again. Wet roots in a dense mix can yellow the lower leaves.
  • Humidity: Higher humidity helps long new leaves unfurl with less tearing or sticking.
  • Temperature: Keep growth warm and stable; cold, wet conditions can stall the stem and damage roots.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot, the mix has compacted or the support no longer fits the stem height.
  • Fertilising: Feed lightly during active growth; reduce feeding when light levels and growth slow.
  • Propagation: Propagate from stem cuttings with at least one node, kept warm and humid while rooting.
  • Pruning: Remove damaged leaves at the petiole base or shorten an overlong stem above a healthy node.
  • Semi-hydroponics: Semi-hydro can work when roots are adapted gradually and the reservoir stays clean and oxygenated.

Philodendron holtonianum unfurling issues and delayed mature leaves

  • Juvenile leaves: Simple narrow leaves are normal on young plants before the adult blade shape develops.
  • Delayed mature shape: Low light, lack of support or interrupted growth can slow the shift into the long divided form.
  • Torn new leaves: Dry air or uneven watering can make thin new blades stick while unfurling.
  • Yellowing leaves: Check the root zone for dense, wet substrate or a pot that dries too slowly.
  • Pests: Inspect new leaves and petioles for thrips, spider mites, mealybugs and scale.

Philodendron holtonianum toxicity

Philodendron holtonianum contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. Keep leaves, petioles and stems away from pets and children that may chew plant material.

Botanical background of Philodendron holtonianum

The genus Philodendron was described by Heinrich Wilhelm Schott in 1829 in Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunst, Litteratur, Theater und Mode. Its name combines Greek philo- or philein, meaning loving, with dendron, meaning tree. Schott also described Philodendron holtonianum, which was published in Bonplandia in 1859. The epithet holtonianum is formed from Holton with the Latin adjectival ending -ianum, indicating a dedication to Holton.

A Colombian climbing Philodendron with narrow juvenile growth and long, slender mature leaves that develop their divided shape on support.

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