Aphylia

🌱 Scindapsus Pictus Jade Satin

πŸ”¬ Scindapsus pictus Β· πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§ Family: Araceae Β· 🌍 Origin: Bangladesh, Thailand

About Scindapsus Pictus Jade Satin

Scindapsus pictus is a tropical aroid vine cultivated for its heart-shaped, satiny leaves with silvery variegation. 'Jade Satin' is a horticultural selection typically grown as a trailing or climbing indoor plant and maintained by vegetative propagation. Like many Araceae, its tissues contain calcium oxalate crystals that can cause irritation if chewed.

🌱 Detailed Care Guide

β˜€οΈ Light: 🌀️ Partial Sun
πŸ’§ Watering: surface, soaking
πŸ’¦ Humidity: 70%
🌑️ Temperature: Ideal: 22Β°C β€’ Min: 12Β°C β€’ Max: 32Β°C
βš™οΈ Maintenance: βœ… Easy
🌱 Substrate: perlite

πŸ“ Growth & Structure

πŸ“ Height: 300 cm
↔️ Wingspan: 60 cm
πŸ”„ Life Cycle: perennial
πŸƒ Foliage: evergreen
🌿 Seasons: spring, summer, autumn, winter

πŸ“… Phenology

🌱 Sowing: march, april, may
🌸 Flowering: june
🍎 Fruiting: september

🌍 Ecology

🌿 Biodiversity Role: green manure
πŸ¦‹ Pollinators: beetle, fly
🌍 Conservation: least concern

✨ Usage & Benefits

  • ornamental

⚠️ Safety & Traits

πŸ‘€ Human Toxicity: slightly toxic
🐾 Pet Toxicity: slightly toxic
⚠️ Allergens: calcium oxalate crystals, irritant sap

🌱 Propagation

🌱 Propagation: cutting, layering, clump division
🌰 Sowing Method: greenhouse, pot
πŸͺ΄ Transplanting: βœ…
πŸ—οΈ Needs Staking: βœ…

πŸ§ͺ Soil & Nutrition

πŸ§ͺ Fertilizer: liquid fertilizer, granular fertilizer, sea fertilizer
⚑ Nutrient Needs: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium

πŸ› Pests & Diseases

πŸ› Pests: Mealybugs, Spider mites, Scale insects
🦠 Diseases: Root rot, Leaf spot

πŸ“ Expert Advice

🌱 Soil Advice:

Use a chunky, fast-draining aroid mix: potting soil cut with perlite and bark, plus coconut fiber and/or sphagnum for even moisture. Aim for an airy medium that drains freely while staying lightly moist; avoid dense, water-retentive mixes to reduce root rot.

🌾 Sowing Advice:

This cultivar is almost always propagated vegetatively rather than from seed. Take stem cuttings in active growth (spring–summer): cut below a node with 1–2 leaves, remove the lowest leaf, and root in water or in a moist, airy medium (e.g., peat-free houseplant mix amended with perlite/bark). Provide warmth (about 20–27Β°C), bright indirect light, and high humidity; pot up once roots are well formed. If planting multiple rooted cuttings into one container for a fuller pot, space them so stems are not crowded and provide a support from the start.

πŸ§ͺ Fertilizer Advice:

Feed during active growth (spring–summer) with a balanced liquid fertilizer at 1/2 strength about monthly, or use a light dose of slow-release granular fertilizer per label. Reduce or stop feeding in winter and avoid overfertilizing, which can scorch roots and leaves.

πŸ‚ Mulching Advice:

Indoors, mulching is optional; apply a thin top-dress (bark or clay pellets) to reduce surface evaporation and stabilize moisture. Keep the layer shallow and away from stems to reduce fungus gnat habitat and stem rot risk.

πŸ—οΈ Staking Advice:

A climbing aroid; growth is stronger and leaves typically size up when given support. Train stems onto a moss/coir pole, plank, or trellis and tie loosely with soft plant ties. Keep the support slightly moist if using a moss pole to encourage aerial root attachment; reposition and retie as vines extend.

βœ‚οΈ Pruning:

Prune or pinch back long, bare vines just above a node to encourage branching; use the prunings as cuttings. Remove yellowing/damaged leaves and trim weak stems at any time; heavier pruning is best in spring/summer.

Tags: #Scindapsus pictus#Jade Satin#satin pothos#aroid#Araceae#tropical houseplant#evergreen vine#trailing plant#climbing plant#indoor foliage#ornamental foliage#variegated leaves

πŸ“– View Complete Guide
For the full interactive experience with additional photos, personalized advice, and gardening tools:
Visit Aphylia β†’

πŸ”— Discover More