SKU: 70646443696
anthurium cutucuense

anthurium cutucuense Anthurium cutucuense – Deeply Lobed Bullate Leaves

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Description

anthurium cutucuense Anthurium cutucuense – Deeply Lobed Bullate LeavesAnthurium cutucuense From humid montane forest in Ecuador, Anthurium cutucuense develops trisect foliage with three elongated segments and a strongly textured surface. The divided blades, coloured petioles and red midrib show its palmately divided leaf form. The plant needs bright filtered light, humidity and a breathable root zone indoors. Hot dry conditions or stagnant wet substrate can stress leaves and roots quickly, especially while segmented new

Anthurium cutucuense

From humid montane forest in Ecuador, Anthurium cutucuense develops trisect foliage with three elongated segments and a strongly textured surface. The divided blades, coloured petioles and red midrib show its palmately divided leaf form.

The plant needs bright filtered light, humidity and a breathable root zone indoors. Hot dry conditions or stagnant wet substrate can stress leaves and roots quickly, especially while segmented new growth is still expanding.

What defines Anthurium cutucuense

  • Leaf form: The species has trisect blades, with three elongated segments divided back toward the petiole.
  • Leaf texture: The segments are strongly bullate, giving the surface a raised, quilted texture.
  • Colour: The upper surface is dark green and matte to subvelvety; the underside is paler green to silvery green.
  • Midrib: The midrib can be bright red to deep red and visibly sunken on the upper surface.
  • Petioles: Petioles are red to dark purple and may be speckled or mottled with pale green.
  • Origin: It is endemic to Ecuador, especially Morona-Santiago and Zamora-Chinchipe.
  • Habitat: It is associated with montane moist to wet forest from roughly 1542–3000 m.
  • Root needs: The roots need a humid but airy zone around them, with quick drainage after watering.

Montane growth and pot culture

Anthurium cutucuense grows as a hemiepiphytic or epiphytic vine, occasionally terrestrial, in wet mountain forest. The segmented blades, coloured petioles and bullate surface are central to its appearance, while the extending stem and aerial-root tendency call for open substrate and careful spacing.

Keep temperatures mild to warm and stable. Protect the plant from heat spikes, dry air and direct midday sun, especially while new leaves are expanding.

Humid care for Anthurium cutucuense

  • Humidity: Higher humidity reduces dry edges and helps new segmented leaves expand cleanly.
  • Light: Bright filtered light is ideal. Direct sun can damage segmented leaves before they harden.
  • Water: Water evenly, then let the pot drain fully. The mix should stay lightly moist, not saturated.
  • Substrate: Use a loose Anthurium mix with bark, coco chips and mineral pieces for root aeration.
  • Temperature: Keep conditions stable and mild to warm. Avoid chilled roots and sudden heat near glass.
  • Placement: Leave space around new leaves so the segments do not catch or crease while opening.

Segmented leaf stress on Anthurium cutucuense

  • Dry leaf edges: Check humidity and watering consistency, especially during new leaf expansion.
  • Root decline: Dense wet substrate can suffocate roots and lead to yellowing or stalled growth.
  • Heat stress: Curling, dull leaves or fast drying can follow hot dry placement.
  • Slow recovery: Chilled wet roots can keep the plant inactive after shipping or repotting.
  • Creased segments: New leaves can mark if they open against shelves, supports or neighbouring pots.

Chewing risk for Anthurium cutucuense

Keep Anthurium cutucuense away from pets and children. Anthurium plant tissue can irritate the mouth and throat if chewed, and sap may irritate skin or eyes.

Cutucú name and publication

Anthurium cutucuense was described by Michael T. Madison and published in Selbyana 2:256 in 1978. The species name refers to the Cordillera de Cutucú in southeastern Ecuador, matching the plant’s documented Ecuadorian montane background. It is part of the palmately divided Anthurium group, and the trisect blade is one of its defining characters.

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