🌱 Epipremnum
À propos de Epipremnum
Epipremnum aureum is an evergreen, climbing aroid vine widely grown as a houseplant for its trailing stems and often variegated, heart-shaped leaves. Native to the Society Islands, it is frequently cultivated indoors worldwide and can naturalize outdoors in frost-free climates.
🌱 Guide d'Entretien Détaillé
📐 Croissance & Structure
📅 Phénologie
🌍 Écologie
✨ Utilisations & Avantages
- ornamental
⚠️ Sécurité & Caractéristiques
🌱 Propagation
🧪 Sol & Nutrition
🐛 Ravageurs & Maladies
📝 Conseils d'Expert
Use an airy, fast-draining aroid-style mix (potting soil amended with perlite plus chunky bark and/or coconut fiber). Choose a pot with drainage holes; avoid compacted, waterlogged media. Let the top few cm dry between waterings and refresh the mix if it becomes fine, sour, or holds water too long.
Seed is rarely used in cultivation; if available, sow indoors in spring in a sterile, free-draining medium (e.g., fine bark/coir + perlite), lightly cover, and keep warm (about 22–27°C) with high humidity and bright, indirect light. Keep evenly moist but not waterlogged. Most plants are propagated by stem cuttings: take 1–3 node cuttings, remove the lower leaf, root in water or moist sphagnum/perlite, then pot on once roots are well developed. Plant at the same depth as previously grown and avoid cold drafts.
Feed during active growth (spring–summer) with a balanced liquid fertilizer at reduced strength, or use a light application of slow-release granular fertilizer. Apply about every 4–6 weeks for liquids; reduce or stop in winter. Flush the pot occasionally with plain water to limit salt build-up.
In containers, mulch lightly (thin bark/wood-chip topdressing or clay pellets) to reduce surface evaporation and splashing. Keep mulch a few cm away from stems and do not apply so thickly that it traps constant moisture at the crown.
Epipremnum is a climbing aroid; provide support (moss pole, coir totem, trellis, or stake) if you want larger leaves and upright growth. Tie stems loosely with soft plant ties and keep the support slightly moist to encourage aerial roots to attach. For trailing use in hanging baskets, support is optional; pinch/prune to maintain shape.
Prune any time during active growth to control length and encourage branching; cut just above a node. Remove yellow or damaged leaves. Tip-pruning promotes a fuller plant; older, leggy vines can be cut back hard and the cut pieces used as propagation material.
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